ABSTRACT
Major developments in information technology in the digital society are eventually realised in the way in which research is conducted, particularly in the field of digital humanities (DH). Through a brief historical survey, this paper observes that the adoption of new technologies in DH occurs with some delay from the wide-scale adoption of the same technologies in other areas of society. This delay allows for a prediction about what technologies may be adopted in the near future in DH. In particular, the rise of social media in recent years provides a potential model for future DH research, particularly as it differs greatly from previous technologies in its capacity to engage end-users in digital methods. This paper argues that the techniques by which users interact with data in social media, particularly categorisation and semantic tagging, can be applied to a broad range of humanities research methodologies using similar interfaces to those of social media platforms. It then discusses some research tools developed by the author as a way of facilitating the interaction between researchers and primary sources using digital methods. Although much more limited than social media tools, it shows a way forward for implementing social media methods in the field of humanities research.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Digital Resources
Internet Archive <https://archive.org>
Facebook <https://www.facebook.com>
General Architecture for Text Engineering <https://gate.ac.uk>
Google Books <https://books.google.com>
Oxford Text Archive <https://ota.ox.ac.uk>
Pinterest <https://www.pinterest.com>
Pre-Christian Religions of the North <http://www.abdn.ac.uk/pcrn>
Project Gutenberg <https://www.gutenberg.org>
The Skaldic Project <http://www.abdn.ac.uk/skaldic>
The Text Encoding Initiative <http://www.tei-c.org>
Twitter <https://twitter.com>
Wikipedia <https://www.wikipedia.org>
Zooniverse <https://www.zooniverse.org>
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Tarrin Wills
Tarrin Wills (PhD Sydney) is lecturer in English at the University of Sydney, on secondment from the Centre for Scandinavian Studies at the University of Aberdeen. He has made numerous contributions to the fields of Digital Humanities and Old Norse studies, including extensive involvement in the projects Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages, Pre-Christian Religions of the North, The Medieval Nordic Text Archive (Menota) and the Medieval Unicode Font Initiative (MUFI). In 2016, he will be taking up a Horizon 2020 Marie Curie fellowship at the University of Copenhagen.