Hello world!
¶ 1 Leave a comment on paragraph 1 0 Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!
¶ 1 Leave a comment on paragraph 1 0 Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!
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Add Adrian Wisknicki’s One More Voice–decolonizing the archive, aimed at pedagogy and collaboration, minimal and accessible computing.
The Quipu Project: https://interactive.quipu-project.com
I’ve written on Third Cinema and DH as part of a larger project: https://mapplega.com/2016/06/23/a-guerrilla-theory-for-the-digital-humanities-slides/
This includes a related reading list attentive to decolonial thought + gender!
Hey Roopika! I was just referred here by my own website. This page is an amazing resource.
Sadly, though, my essay is overwhelmingly colonized. The digital natives metaphor needs so badly to be disassembled that “running with the metaphor,” articulating natives with spears as though they’re stuck in a time machine, fills me with a deep sense of shame. But it also makes me overwhelmingly grateful for the fantastic feminists and anti-colonial activists and academics that have helped me grow as a person over the past years.
Consider this comment a bit of self-reflexivity sorely missing from the original post.
Thanks, Martin, for leaving the first comment – and it let us add more resources on OA! -Roopika
[a database-driven CMS]
Just a (probably pedantic) note to say that the use of a database-driven CMS doesn’t necessarily mean that the site will load slowly for the client. It’s possible for a static site to be more resource intensive for the client than a CMS. That said, Jekyll is definitely lighter on the server… Which brings me to a serious point: would it make sense to distinguish between, or at least draw attention to, hosting environment resources and client resources?
Given the social justice focus of the project, I just wanted to draw attention to the work of Stuart Lawson, a Ph.D. student starting with me in September 2015, who will be undertaking a three-year study of the politics of open access, with respect to social justice issues: http://stuartlawson.org/2015/07/working-in-the-open/
Website content © Social Justice and the Digital Humanities 2021. All rights reserved.
Source: http://criticaldh.roopikarisam.com/uncategorized/hello-world/
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