Digital Memory Project Reviews, Vol. III

by Patricia BelenMajel Peters
Contributors: Patricia BelenAránzazu BorracheroMaría F. BuitragoR.C.Julesa GrimesKristy LeonardatosTheodore Daniel ManningKelsey MilianMajel Peters

Continuing the practice of previous graduate students in DHUM 78000 Digital Memories: Theory and Practice, the Spring 2023 cohort brings a critical lens to digital memory projects as a method of engaging with the Digital Humanities field, developing critical evaluation skills (theoretical and practical), and surfacing impactful work in the Digital Memory space. This open-access Manifold publication includes our reviews of digital projects, an introduction from the editors explaining the feminist care lens through which these reviews were processed, including our insight into our editorial interventions, and observations intended for future curators. Miriam Posner’s “How Did They Make That?” framework continues to serve as the underlying structure of our reviews, while each reviewer brings their unique perspective (see Positionality Statements) to their work. We hope you enjoy Digital Memory Project Reviews, Volume III, and that it serves as an inspiring resource!

Project screenshot quilt.

About this Project

  • Introduction

    by Patricia Belen, Aránzazu Borrachero, Majel Peters
    • This text has 0 annotations
    • This text has 0 highlights
    • This text has 0 annotations
    • This text has 0 highlights

Table of Contents

Selecting a framework below will reveal a different index of the complete 22 review volume. Process and Presentation, perhaps less self-explanatory than the other options, groups the projects according to the different tools and techniques used to render digital humanities projects.

Process and Presentation

Histories and Identities

Events and Time Periods

Geographic Locations


Process and Presentation

Archival
Data Visualizations
Oral Histories/Testimonies
Mapping


Histories and Identities

Art, Music and Sound
Asian
Black and African Americans
Feminism
Indigenous
Jewish
LatinX and Latin American
LGBTQ+
Mixed Heritage
Science and Medicine
U.S. History


Events and Time Periods

1920s New York
American Folk Music
Avant Garde
Colonization and Decolonization
Contemporary
Covid Pandemic
The Holocaust
Harlem Renaissance
HIV/AIDS
Natural Disasters
Suffrage
State-Sponsored Violence
U.S. Immigration


Geographic Locations

Australia
Europe
Global
Melanesia
Middle East
North America
South America
South Asia

Metadata

  • publisher
    CUNY Manifold
  • publisher place
    New York, NY
  • rights
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.