DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly
2007
Volume 1 Number 2
Volume 1 Number 2
DHQ in the Public Eye
Abstract
This editorial reflects on developments to DHQ and the ways we can assess impact and readership.
Welcome to the second issue of DHQ. It is difficult, at this stage in a journal’s
progress, to monitor uptake, success, or readership. Where can we start? The launch of
DHQ was emblazoned across various discussion lists (such as Humanist, Digital Classicist, Digital Medievalist,
TEI-L)
and featured on many blogs (such as Grand
Text Auto, Stoa, and personal blogs
from those within the digital humanities community). DHQ is pointed to from the Digital
Humanities entry on Wikipedia, linked to by over 40 different home pages, and has been saved and tagged by 90 different
individuals on del.icio.us, suggesting we have reached thousands of potential readers.
Still, with the comments feature yet to be enabled (we are still building the back end
of the site, and this experiment of a journal will continue to evolve with each issue)
it is difficult to gain a feel for opinions regarding the journal — save from those
individuals which have taken the time to email the editors directly with their
congratulations. Comments on del.icio.us generally raised one question about our format:
Where is the RSS
feed? And we are pleased that this issue features this functionality, alerting
you when we have added new content to the journal (which we plan to do even between
issues).
So far so good, even if the digital humanities community can be viewed as being fairly
small, fairly insular, and fairly unlikely to reach out to wider academic and
technological sphere. We at DHQ hope that we will eventually reach a wider audience (and
trust our readers will help us do so), introducing the type and range of activities the
digital humanities community is interested in, and featuring energetic, novel, and
interesting articles on a variety of research, making use of all the Internet
technologies at our disposal.
One of the papers in this, our second issue, has already done just that. Dennis G. Jerz's
Somewhere Nearby is Colossal Cave: Examining Will
Crowther's Original Adventure in Code and in Kentucky, was
posted on the test site for proofreading a few weeks before launch, when one of our
editors featured an advance mention of it on his blog. A few days later, it was picked
up by the gaming community on a popular discussion list (rec.arts.int-fiction), garnering comments such as “HOLY MOLY!” and “It
is clear on a single reading that this is the most important single paper ever
written on the history of interactive fiction” before it had even been formally
published. It doesn’t stop there: the paper went on to be featured on Boing
Boing (a “directory of wonderful things” which is read by hundreds
of thousands of readers), then being mentioned on Slashdot,
the popular technology-related news site. (We are pleased to report our servers survived
being “slashdotted” so far, which is perhaps the best load test we could
wish for). Shortly after, it featured on Metafilter,
a community weblog that anyone can edit with a vast readership, where comments included
“What academic research should aspire to be” and “I can feel a new LOLCATS
meme coming on. (I can haz mint-cake?)”. On the eve of publication, we have had a
request from a local Kentucky newspaper wishing to republish the paper (which our
publication terms willingly permit). This paper has legs.
In addition, publication on DHQ has made the original game available again for a new
audience. When the preprint version of this article became available on the internet in
August 2007, Matthew
Russoto modified Crowther's source code so that it will compile for today's
computers. David
Kinder made a Windows executable version. The colossal cave lives again.
Of course, this is due to the contents of the article: Will Crowther's classic computer
game Colossal Cave Adventure created the text-adventure game genre, and
this paper details new evidence discovered when unearthing Crowther's original source
code (in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike, on a Unix server), which was
thought lost. The original game is compared to the real Colossal Cave in Kentucky, with
some surprising insights into the structure and history of the game. The contribution of
this article to gaming history, given the popularity of games with the type of people
who read Slashdot or Boing Boing or Metafilter, is assured. Yet the popularity of this
article, even before publication, also indicates how work in digital humanities, and
publications in Digital Humanities Quarterly, can reach
beyond our disciplinary boundaries, and provide interesting, entertaining, and
academically rigorous contributions to a general reader beyond the usual digital
humanities suspects.
We hope other articles in this issue tickle readers in the same way. Some useful
connections emerge between Jerz's article and Eric Eve's analysis of the challenges of
interactive fiction design, both of which present a thematic perspective grounded in a
detailed view of the structure and coding of the game. Steve Anderson examines the
emerging digital practices and techniques that distinguish the digital avant garde, and
David Hoover argues for the critical and interpretive value of text analysis.
We also hope that the success of this article indicates the importance and benefits of
publishing in DHQ. We encourage you to continue with us in this experiment: submit,
review, and enjoy.