Digital Humanities Places and Spaces
Although working in the same university and being interested in similar issues,
we, the editors of this special issue, had never met until recently. As it often
goes, sitting in different buildings belonging to different departments at the
Otaniemi campus of the Aalto University, we were separated by the physical space
and organizational structures of the university. Only the lucky coincidence that
one of us had a short presentation at the “Aalto HELDIG DH
pizza” event, and the other came to listen to that talk took us to
the same room to talk to each other. Meeting on the same physical premises
enabled us to see how close our interests and thoughts were, not only regarding
pizza, but also in scholarly terms.
Our story is not unique. Exploring the digital humanities (DH) matters, one
cannot avoid noticing how the establishment of various DH places and their
organizational changes influences how, where, and with whom we do DH research.
Place plays a role in all academic disciplines, affecting the way we construct
knowledge. In the DH field, which comes with a promise of utilization of
“nonmaterial” and ubiquitous digital resources, there is
a threat that we will forget how the place is also entangled in the digital. DH
scholars work together in a physical place — a center and a laboratory — in
which an infrastructure, facilities, and equipment determine the knowledge
creation practices. DH researchers also collaborate in virtual space — online
platforms and virtual research environments — in which an infrastructure,
connection, and operation affect the work and research communication. The
algorithms and designs of digital analysis and collaboration tools direct the
way we work and what kinds of practices are not doable. Further, DH scholars
also practice and collaborate in temporary places like hackathons and summer
schools established around particular topics and people. Temporariness is one
aspect that forms knowledge creation practices. In addition, the prerequisites
for doing DH research vary greatly based on the wider social and cultural
surroundings.
Examination of the research practices and structures in their cultural contexts
and the temporal dimensions guiding the DH from the perspective of situatedness
is a relevant topic with great intellectual importance. It reveals the
fundamental prerequisites and unnamed assumptions directing and influencing the
research and, through that, the research findings. Although the concept of
digital comes with an assumption of placelessness and detachment from geography
or physical spaces, these matters still play a significant role in the way DH
research is practiced today and in the future. Geography, location, and
organizational structures open the questions of accessibility and equality:
spatiality shapes the opportunities for doing DH research, and both divides and
unifies scholars. Organizational and algorithmic structures are political
because they construct the prerequisites of research by pushing toward one kind
of collaboration and make other kinds of DH work difficult to pursue. The
approach of looking at DH from spatial angles provides interesting views of the
field’s present-day situation and where it is potentially going in the future.
Therefore, it is particularly important to look at DH as a field entangled with
the concepts of place and space that entail issues of
the workplace, social interactions, and research communication.
Notions of
place and
space have popped up across
various academic fields and been investigated in different contexts from
socially constructed physical places to virtual spaces involving geospatial
technologies, platforms, and services. Significantly, the development of spatial
technologies and digital research, which would seem to detach work from a
physical location, has led to the growing interest in the concepts of
place and
space that are key elements in defining
the research culture. Based on essential studies on place and space by Relph
[
1976], Lefebvre [
1991], Soja [
1996], and Harrison and
Dourish [
1996], we identify place as a
physical location that involves structure, materiality, connectedness,
interaction, cultural representation, and social behavior. In contrast to place
as the reality, space is seen as the physical and social landscape that emerges
through processes operating over varying spatial and temporal scales [
Saar and Palang 2009]. Space is thus considered in nonphysical categories
including cyberspace, digital infrastructure, geographical space, digital
platforms and software. Therefore, space, as Harrison and Dourish aptly
summarized, is the opportunity to build a place framed as the understood
reality.
The juxtaposition of these two concepts is a starting point to investigate digital humanities research practices determined by the
aspects of infrastructure (material and nonmaterial), social interaction
(communication and collaboration), and context (regional, social, and cultural).
Our perspective on DH research practices stems from the observation of three
significant changes in the field’s development, entangled with physical and
virtual dimensions: institutionalization, globalization, and collaboration.
The first challenges are related to the
institutionalization of DH, infrastructural transformations, and the
location of DH activities at the university campus. Over the recent years, DH
has been rapidly developing, moving from a “set of practices”
toward an independent field [
Klein and Gold 2016] through the establishment
of DH centers [
Flanders and Unsworth 2002]
[
Zorich 2008]
[
Fraistat 2012] and laboratories. Some research centers have been
converted into departments offering a number of different programs at the
postgraduate level (e.g., the Centre for Computing in the Humanities was renamed
the King’s College Department of Digital Humanities in 2011), while some have
launched separate laboratories like King’s Digital Lab, formed as an independent
unit in 2015 and closely affiliated with the Department of Digital Humanities at
King’s College London. Thus, DH, in a certain sense, has been transformed from
practice
space to a physical
place operating as
center, department, and laboratory.
The function of the infrastructural turn that has occurred in the DH area is to
be an “agent of change,” as Neil Fraistat rightly
called it in the context of the DH center [
Fraistat 2012]. The
growing number of humanities labs thus raises the questions of the role of new
physical places in the humanities and new research practices formed by a
laboratory structure. In contrast to early versions of DH places, the laboratory
model can function both as a physical working place (e.g., the Franke Family
Digital Humanities Laboratory at Yale University Library) and a virtual research
environment (e.g., HuNI — Humanities Networked Infrastructure — a virtual
laboratory of the Australian government’s NeCTAR — National e-Research
Collaboration Tools and Resources — program). This multifunctionality of
laboratories affects DH, which is seen as both a discipline located in a
physical place (center, department, and lab) and a set of practices used in
various areas (virtual labs, lab courses, and collaboratories).
The topics of infrastructural changes and the “laboratorization” of the humanities have been gradually undertaken
by researchers in academic [
Emerson et al. n.d.]
[
Earhart 2015]
[
Svensson 2010]
[
Foka et al. 2017]
[
Kitch 2017]
[
Lane 2017]
[
Pawlicka 2017]
[
Smithies et al. 2017]
[
Pask 2018] and nonacademic publications [
Hiatt 2005]
[
Joselow 2016]
[
Breithaupt 2017]. Furthermore, it is worth noting conferences and
workshops devoted to institutional transformations in the humanities, such as
“Building the Humanities Lab: Scholarly Practices in
Virtual Research Environments,” the panel session in the Digital
Humanities Conference held at King’s College London in 2010; the “Theories and Practices of the Literary Lab” roundtable
at the Modern Language Association National Meeting in Boston in 2013; “The Hum Lab: A Consortial Workshop” organized by the
Hurford Center for the Arts and Humanities at Haverford College in 2014; “The Humanities Laboratory: Discussions of New Campus
Models” conference organized by Arizona State University’s Institute
for Humanities Research at the National Endowment for the Humanities in 2016;
“Digital Humanities Forum: Places, Spaces, Sites:
Mapping Critical Intersections in Digital Humanities,” which took
place at the Institute for Digital Research in the Humanities at the University
of Kansas in 2016; “Reimagining the Humanities Lab,”
the panel discussion at the ADHO Conference in 2018; “Making
Change through the Humanities: Institutes, Ideas and Infrastructures”
workshop at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm in 2018; “What Is a Feminist Lab?” symposium at the University of
Colorado, Boulder in 2019; “Humanities Laboratories:
Critical Infrastructures and Knowledge Experiments” workshop at
King’s College London in 2019; “Rebuilding
Laboratories” workshop at the Institute of Advanced Studies of the
University of Birmingham in 2019, and “The Architecture of
Science and the Humanities” workshop held at Netherlands Institute
for Advanced Study in 2019. These activities show that the issues of place and
space for DH research practices are becoming more and more significant in the
face of DH’s institutional changes and the emergence of new research
environments like virtual labs. Physical and virtual spaces entail particular
research practices, the form of collaboration, and the manner of knowledge
production.
The second noticeable change in the DH area is a turn toward
internationalization and the
global development of the
field. DH has been established all over the world through research centers [
centerNet n.d.] and laboratories, increasingly extending beyond
Western countries. The issue of global DH is garnering more attention, and it
suffices to mention the annual international conference of the Alliance of
Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO) with the special theme of Global Digital
Humanities held at the University of Western Sydney in 2015, the annual Global
Digital Humanities Symposium held at Michigan State University since 2016, the
Global Outlook::Digital Humanities (GO::DH) Special Interest Group at the ADHO,
and the call for papers for a book entitled
Global Debates
in the Digital Humanities
[
Fiormonte et al. n.d.], a part of the Debates in the Digital Humanities
Series published by the University of Minnesota Press. The process of DH
globalization involves a number of research inquiries entangled with the
concepts of place and space such as global DH infrastructure, global virtual
collaboration and networks, and a local physical place immersed in the regional,
social, and cultural environment. DH research practices are thus both globalized
and determined by the local situatedness.
The last observation that drives us to study the DH research practices related
to the concepts of space is the creation of new forms of collaboration and communication through platforms (Slack, Zoom,
Github, Trello, or Google Drive), social media (Twitter), and virtual research
environments (TextGridLab). These tools have given rise to the development of a
new model of cooperation and dissemination of research, taking place in physical
and virtual environments (e.g. “Making Connections”
was the first Humanities Commons Twitter conference in 2019). The collaboration
processes have both spatial and temporal dimensions; therefore, we suggest
examining research practices occurring in temporary events, the durability of
established collaboration, the opportunity for creating global collaboration,
and the research ethics related to virtual cooperation, and more. The various
digital research tools that DH scholars use and develop can be seen as spaces
requiring a certain type of data organization, working methods, language skills,
and cultural understanding to function properly. Simultaneously, particularly
those analysis programs that are easy to use or that facilitate easy learning
can become widely used only because of the access and not necessarily because of
the high-quality analysis.
The above changes and observations, related to the concepts of
place
and
space, present the
digital humanities research
as situated practices. The development of infrastructure in the
humanities and the establishment of laboratory places have led to the
transformation of the humanities toward a situated field [
Emerson et al. n.d.]
[
Svensson 2015]
[
Purdy and DeVoss 2017] entangled with physical and virtual environments. The
research process occurring in a particular place becomes as significant as the
outcome of a study. A laboratory draws attention to the place where work is
constructed, focusing on research practices, structures, devices, and workplace
design. The shift toward situated practices is the vital context for the
investigation of place in DH since it opens up the discussion on the issue of
research practices in a specific environment, employing tools and materials in
space, design space, research collaboration, and the spatial representation of
practice. Hence, contributors to this special issue discuss different forms of
situatedness: institutional, local, regional, national, geographical,
socio-cultural, and virtual.
As more scholars become engaged with DH research all over the world, and the
organizational structures of the sites of digital humanities is developing fast,
we need to look at the concepts of place and space
that significantly affect the research culture. Therefore, this special issue
brings these scattered discussions together and examines the situatedness of DH
research practices in wider terms.
Situated Research Practices in Digital Humanities
The articles in this special issue examine the different aspects of the situated research practices of the DH, covering two
perspectives, respectively referring to the title of Lab
and Slack: physical and virtual places of DH research. The physical places of research refer to the various DH
laboratories and centers all over the world and more widely to the surroundings
that a location in a particular city, country, or continent gives to DH
research. As for the virtual environments of DH research,
we define the digital internet-based collaboration platforms that enable
research and scholarly collaboration. We propose thinking through the
location-based research practices and digital collaboration forms of the DH
research to explore the role of spatiality in locating the field, facilitating
digital practices, changing the nature of research, and fostering collaboration.
The issue explores spatial transformations and the architecture of the DH to
examine how the organization of DH research, the materiality, and social
practices are bound with a place where researchers interact, material devices
are collected, and knowledge is constructed. It also seeks to respond to the
question of how the spatiality and organization of space can prevent or
complicate high-quality DH research.
The aspects that influence DH research in both physical and virtual places are
(1) infrastructures, (2) the research and collaboration practices the places
facilitate, (3) the social and cultural contexts relevant in that place, and (4)
the temporality. These aspects influence one another, and changes in one can
affect the others. All these aspects affect what is studied, the ways research
can be done and, in the end, the results of our knowledge, what kind of
knowledge DH research can provide.
The infrastructures (1) set, for example, the position of a lab in the university
organization, its funding, collaboration premises, the material devices, and
digital resources it can offer. Further, in virtual platforms, there are
material infrastructures, such as the capacity of the used devices, the strength
of the internet connection, and the setting conditions. In addition, in virtual
platforms, the algorithmic design defines what kinds of collaboration and
research practices are possible in that place, how all the used platforms
communicate with one another, and how easy it is to organize the used data and
identify the significant discussions as the project proceeds.
The research and collaboration practices (2) are less-tangible aspects of the
situated DH research. Both in a laboratory setting and on a virtual
collaboration platform certain research methods are favored over the others, the
division of labor and collaboration is designed following a certain logic, and
the meetings are structured in a certain way. The research and collaboration
practices influence the ways information processing and filtering proceeds and
potentially what ideas become crystallized, and which are left aside.
Additionally, the social and cultural context (3) plays a significant role both
in the DH centers and in virtual platforms. Location of a lab in a particular
city and, for example, proximity or distance to other DH institutions or the IT
industry, the accessibility, quantity and quality of digital data on local
issues, or legislation all influence the functions of a DH lab. The virtual
collaboration platforms enable global collaboration and encounters between
scholars with diverse backgrounds. To avoid misunderstandings, the communication
in a virtual platform must be very explicit in the cases where there is no, or
very limited, physical contact. The social and cultural context also raises the
important questions of accessibility: who feels welcomed and socially accepted
in a DH space and who does not, and what kinds of disciplinary backgrounds or
research topics are favored over the others?
The temporal (4) dimension also matters: to meet people, you need to be in the
right place at the right moment. Virtual collaboration is also bound to time,
both in projects collaborating across time zones and in more mundane questions
of the virtual collaborators’ preferred working rhythms.
The special issue divides the situated research practices into physical and
virtual for the sake of analysis, but we acknowledge that, in reality, these
aspects often overlap. Several articles in this special issue point out that the
physical and digital actually overlap, and it is often practically impossible to
separate them from each other [see, for example,
El
Khatib et al.]. The underlying assumption of this special issue is
that DH research is very much a collaborative effort. Although we acknowledge
that there is also excellent DH research done by individual scholars, they are
often associated with a physical or virtual DH environment and the discussions
there.
The articles in this special issue are grouped into two main clusters that
represent a unified set of themes: Cluster 1: “Physical
Situatedness, Digital/Humanities Labs, and Infrastructure” with a
subcluster “Digital Humanities Lab: Case Studies” and
Cluster 2: “Virtual Situatedness, Digital Practices, and
Collaboration”.
Cluster 1: Physical Situatedness, Digital/Humanities Labs, and
Infrastructure
A discussion of the mutual relations between situatedness, infrastructure,
and digital/humanities practices has been largely unexplored so far. We
rarely think about DH in the context of physical place; however, this
material aspect of work has a strong influence on the way the research is
conducted and produced. A physical place involves affiliation, architecture,
design, organization, policy, and equipment. It is located in a particular
environment (local, regional, and national) that affects its development and
operation. All these features shape the condition, possibilities, and
constraints of doing scholarly works. They can both stimulate and disturb
the research work and drive and limit interdisciplinarity and collaboration,
as well as facilitate and hinder the transfer of knowledge. Hence, this
cluster opens a number of interesting perspectives on the complexities of
situated research practices. Contributors offer intellectual engagement with
critical thoughts on the role of socio-material infrastructure in the
humanities practices. The purpose of this section is to provide a
theoretical framework for the discussion and understanding of the impact of
situatedness on the production and transmission of scholarly knowledge.
Authors use a wide range of theoretical tools to present various approaches
to undertaking this research inquiry. The analyses lie at the intersections
of infrastructure studies (see
Guldi;
Pawlicka-Deger;
Kil;
Shanmugapriya and Menon), critical analysis of the infrastructure
design (see
Guldi), the archaeology of humanities infrastructure (see
Kil), digital humanities and science and technology studies (see
Malazita, Teboul and Rafeh), laboratory studies (see
Malazita, Teboul and Rafeh;
Pawlicka-Deger), interdisciplinary studies (see Oiva), and
knowledge production and transfer (see
Oiva;
Shanmugapriya and Menon). This broad theoretical perspective
shows how digital/humanities practices become conditioned by a university’s
organizational structure, infrastructure, and digital technologies.
Here, the authors discuss the complexities and the agency of infrastructure,
which organization and design are socially constructed and embedded within
the larger culture of critical thinking about technology and culture (see
Guldi). The contributors argue that the infrastructure is engaged
with existing thought about power, represents a form of scholarly
argumentation (see
Guldi), and produces epistemic objects through the boundaries
drawn around what makes an object knowable (see
Malazita, Teboul and Rafeh). They show how the infrastructure,
the laboratory apparatus, the socio-material assemblages, and the virtual
are in a co-constitutive relationship; they all produce one another,
participating in one another’s existence (see
Malazita, Teboul and Rafeh). Further, the authors demonstrate how
the location, design, and facilities are significant components of the
infrastructure models that are differentiated by operation and function.
Each model for laboratory structure entails different research practices,
methods, and actions, and consequently, produces a specific knowledge (see
Pawlicka-Deger). The mechanisms of knowledge production and
transfer are particularly dependent on the infrastructure that facilitates
and shapes these processes. The authors show how DH centers enable
interdisciplinary knowledge transfer, foster research practices, and
maintain interdisciplinary networks (see
Oiva). Next, the contributors demonstrate the relationships
between the physical situatedness (a location, city, and country) and the
knowledge creation and dissemination. The authors present how the location
in a prominent city and the proximity to other universities and DH places
are essential factors in manufacturing knowledge, facilitating collaboration
and driving competition (see
Oiva;
Shanmugapriya and Menon;
Kil). At the same time, the distance from leading institutions
and the lack of infrastructure hinder research practices, the transfer of
knowledge, and scholarly communication (see
Shanmugapriya and Menon). The authors claim that the
infrastructure plays a critical role in the humanities practices, not only
in the DH based on collaborative and interdisciplinary initiatives and
access to digital tools and resources, but also in the “analog humanities” that are rarely considered in terms of
infrastructure. The authors reveal that the analog files and repositories
also affect the research methods and, consequently, they can influence
theoretical framework and development (see
Kil). To summarize, contributors to the first cluster present
various perspectives and theoretical tools for the discussion on the
entanglement of the infrastructure and situatedness in the
digital/humanities work.
Jo Guldi’s essay, “Scholarly
Infrastructure as Critical Argument,” presents critical
reflections on the design of infrastructure. Guldi argues that the
infrastructure designers are engaging in critical argumentation with their
tools, and proposes the principles of critical thinking about the
infrastructure that define the “culture of
infrastructure”. The criteria show evidence of critical thinking
about humanities practice and active imagination of how digital
infrastructure can mirror or enhance the traditional values of the
humanities — that is, transparency, replicability, and public discourse. The
article draws from an autobiographical narrative of the author’s own
initiative in the design and building of a piece of infrastructure called
Paper Machines. Based on personal experience, the author determines a set of
“critical” principles of infrastructure that
constitute the kind of interventions that render the invisible visible and
stimulates the public purposes and intellectual orientation intended in the
building of infrastructure, and the extent to which humanities and social
science critiques of the flow of information and power in society have
resulted in the creation of alternative or transformative flows.
Urszula Pawlicka-Deger, in the article “The Laboratory Turn: Exploring Discourses, Landscapes, and
Models of Humanities Labs,” reflects on a laboratory boom that
has occurred in the humanities area over the past years. With the
multiplication and diversification of laboratories at university campuses,
in city spaces, and in cultural institutions, it is essential to analyze the
stimulus of the laboratories’ emergence and understand their conditions,
meanings, and functions. The paper begins with the investigation of three
discourses that gave rise to the formation of a laboratory in the
humanities: the transformation of the humanities infrastructure within the
university, the paradigm shifts in the social sciences, and the expansion of
cultural categories (innovation, the maker movement, and the idea of
community). Further, Pawlicka-Deger reflects on the definition of the
humanities lab and presents a history of the laboratory in the humanities.
Next, the author analyzes five models for humanities labs (the center-type
lab, the techno-science lab, the work station-type lab, the social
challenges-centric lab, and virtual lab) and shows how their situatedness,
structure, and function entail different ways of knowledge production. The
essay indicates the role of digital humanities as the driving force behind
building a laboratory space, which promotes a culture of experimentation and
collaboration. The author shows that the humanities lab does not imitate the
science lab but adapts this new infrastructure for its own purposes and
needs.
James W. Malazita, Ezra J. Teboul, and Hined Rafeh’s
article “Digital Humanities as Epistemic Cultures: How
DH Labs Make Knowledge, Objects, and Subjects” examines a DH lab
from the perspective of science and technology studies and laboratory
studies. The central thesis of this essay is that the concept of the “situatedness” of DH labs extends beyond
physical/institutional space and also includes epistemic, political,
sociological, and disciplinary issues. The authors outline the
constructivist model of laboratory knowledge practices developed through
feminist laboratory studies, and how that model’s focus on the laboratory as
a producer of research subjects, rather than a container for them, runs
counter to narratives about laboratories in DH. The authors argue for the
construction of DH laboratories as epistemic cultures that produce epistemic
objects and subjects — objects of inquiry and the practitioners who study
those objects — as well as provide the conditions and infrastructures that
make legitimate DH research. The analysis is based on a case study of the
Tactical Humanities Lab at Rensselaer, an innovative DH lab established in a
seemingly nonhumanities environment that is Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute. The essay thus presents the DH lab situated within the area of
science and technology studies and addresses the issues of its identity,
location, and the social construction of laboratory work boundaries.
Mila Oiva in her article “The Chili
and Honey of Digital Humanities Research” examines DH centers
from the perspective of an interdisciplinary knowledge transfer, which she
argues as being one of the core elements of DH research. Based on interviews
of the directors, researchers, and administrators of established DH centers,
she explores how these DH professionals describe the facilitation of
interdisciplinary knowledge transfer in DH centers. The article discusses
the way knowledge transfer facilitates and influences the knowledge
production in the field. The article points out that the transfer of
knowledge in DH centers is based on overlapping layers of organic networks
and stable organizational structures that support various kinds of
knowledge-sharing practices. Knowledge transfer in DH centers combines an
exchange of ideas in the same place physically and online communication at
various network layers, ranging from outside academia to internal
communication between a research group. The factors that enable information
flows also have the capability of restricting potentially meaningful
information from entering to the field.
Aleksandra Kil in the article “Excavating Infrastructure in the Analog Humanities’ Lab”
investigates Claude Lévi-Strauss’s Laboratoire
d’anthropologie sociale as a case study of the archaeology of
the humanities laboratory. The author provides an in-depth analysis of the
Laboratory of Social Anthropology (LAS) established in the Collège de France
in 1960, linking DH with structuralism and structural anthropology. Kil
discusses the physical situatedness of the LAS, the pragmatic and
entrepreneurial side of its workings, and how this lab was initially
organized around its prominent research apparatus, the Human Relations Area
Files, a vast pre-electronic ethnographical database produced at Yale. Kil
situates the LAS in the framework of the analog humanities and in the
discussion on the infrastructure in the humanities. The article thus
examines the infrastructural features of the analog humanities lab, which
are not recognized as easily as in the case of contemporary digital labs.
Kil excavates the origins of the research infrastructure as we know it: a
lab, repository, catalog, and database. Drawing on theories of media
archaeology and critical infrastructure studies, the article opens new
research inquiries in the scope of the archaeology of the humanities
infrastructure.
Shanmugapriya T. and Nirmala Menon discuss in “Infrastructure and Social Interaction: Situated Research
Practices in Digital Humanities in India” the present state of DH
in India. The authors address the challenges related to DH infrastructure
and interdisciplinary research collaboration in India by mapping the latest
Indian DH hot spots in interviews and a survey. The unevenly distributed
access to physical infrastructures and structural obstacles to
interdisciplinary and interorganizational collaboration create challenges
for DH research. The authors also demonstrate how the narrow integration of
humanists and computer scientists is still a challenge. The diverging career
expectations and interests of the potential collaborators, as well as the
lack of technical know-how among the humanists, create obstacles in a
country with “millions of software engineers.”
Further, digital infrastructures still do not always support, for example,
the computational analysis of several Indian languages. This absorbing and
needed essay provides an important opportunity to advance the understanding
of how geographical, cultural, and physical situatedness affect the
advancement of DH. It also makes an important contribution to the field of
global DH.
Digital Humanities Lab: Case Studies
Building a DH space requires a proper infrastructure, facilities,
institutional regulations, funding, policy, community, and many more
components that direct the development strategy, form a research
environment, and shape the identity of the place. These components also
construct and constitute the borders of the space, which raises the
questions of inclusion and exclusion and affects the way of establishing a
local DH community and people’s sense of belonging to the space. Place
attachment made by policy, representation, and symbolic gestures is
accompanied by a negative side of place identity that is exclusion. The
question is whether a DH venue creates a mechanism to exclude people from
that place and, thereby, from the field. This investigation takes us back to
a long-lasting discussion regarding belonging to the DH area; now, we return
to this debate to pose the question about the role of place in building a
sense of attachment and exclusion. Further, the DH venue is embodied in the
surrounding environment, which has a strong impact on its operation,
function, and practices. In light of the ongoing discussions on the locality
of DH, the time is ripe to consider the conditions of establishing a site
and the aspects of making a unique place reflecting the local flavor.
Therefore, this cluster offers deep insight into the mechanism of creating
and sustaining a DH space.
The articles fit squarely into the “Building a DH
Center” genre; however, they do more than simply summarize the
ways of establishing a local DH place: the contributors, who are the core
and engine of the DH — scholars, practitioners, and students — share their
personal experience and memories related to building and maintaining a DH
place. These workpieces present absorbing stories of successes and failures,
opportunities and obstacles, affections and frustrations. The authors reveal
critical issues related to the sustainability of a DH place controlled by
the local administrative decisions, budgetary priorities, the nature of the
industry, and higher education (see
Cummings, Roh and Callaway;
Berens, Gaterud and Noorda). They pose crucial questions of how
the place’s location and institutional affiliations can both drive and
hinder interdisciplinary collaboration (see
Fickers and Heijden). They also disclose significant problems of
accessibility and physical constraints arising from the design and size of a
place (see
Phillips et al.). Further, the authors demonstrate how the
architecture of space plays a crucial role in driving the research process,
stimulating creativity and engagement, and also ensuring security and
transparency (see
DeRose and Leonard). Hence, the authors discuss how the physical
and virtual situatedness define and delimit ways of conducting research,
establishing a community, and interacting with people (see
Cummings, Roh and Callaway;
Phillips et al.;
Fickers and Heijden). Contributors show how essential it is to
shape the identity of a place that resonates with the local and regional
environment (see
Cummings, Roh and Callaway;
Berens, Gaterud and Noorda) and how important it is to create a
sense of place and a culture of connectedness for the community situated as
a group in one collaborative working space (see
Fickers and Heijden). This cluster reveals the ongoing tensions
between the vertical structure of the administrative and economic landscape
of the university in which a place is situated and the horizontal structure
of the community that is the place’s soul and engine. Even though DH spaces
struggle with funding, facilities, and proper location, the most significant
aspect is the community that fulfills a place, measures its functionality,
and brings the place to life. Similarly, if a center does not engage the
community and draw a critical mass of scholars and students, administrative
and technological supports alone are not enough to make the place
successful. The sense of belonging to the community is thus one of the key
elements of creating a place, and it can ensure its sustainability,
enjoyment, and success. Therefore, given the growth of DH institutions,
centers, and labs, it is important that we discuss such issues now, collect
experience, and provide recommendations that can guide and support the
future attempts to build a DH place.
Catherine DeRose and Peter Leonard in the essay “Digital Humanities on Reserve: From Reading Room to
Laboratory at Yale University Library” present the history of
space in the Sterling Memorial Library of Yale University from 1931 to 2019
and its transformation along with the development of DH. The history of the
newest scholarly support environments at Yale, namely the Franke Family
Digital Humanities Laboratory, renovated in 2019, dates back to 1931 when a
Reserve Book Reading Room was designed in an elaborate Early English
Renaissance style. The authors describe the structural, aesthetic, and
programmatic transformations of a space that aimed to facilitate, drive, and
mirror DH practices. The article examines the role of the design library,
architecture, and policy interventions in building and fostering the DH
field. The transformation of the space in Sterling Memorial Library involved
new ways of thinking about location, materiality, transparency, security,
and collaboration. DeRose and Leonard present the efforts of designing a
suitable place for DH practices as well as the challenges of an adaptive
reuse of a historic (and historicizing) space, which is undoubtedly
different from the process of renovating a newer, less decorative facility
or constructing a completely new room.
Rebekah Cummings, David S. Roh, and Elizabeth Callaway
in the article “Organic and Locally Sourced: Growing a
Digital Humanities Lab with an Eye Towards Sustainability”
present a history and process of building a DH center at the University of
Utah. The authors take readers back to 2009, when the first Digital
Scholarship Lab was established, aiming at bringing together scholars
engaged in digital scholarship practices from different parts of campus.
Despite early administrative buy-in, staff enthusiasm, and technological
support, the lab failed. After this unsuccessful effort, the second attempt
to create a DH center was rooted in skepticism. The authors show the path of
the second lab’s formation: the Digital Matters Lab launched in 2017. Based
on this experience, the authors share lessons of building a DH lab, which
can be summarized in three bullet points: 1) a lab is a community that
should be reflected in an active, vibrant space; 2) strong relationships
with a supportive administration is vital to success; and 3) the lab’s
mission should be driven by local needs. The authors further examine these
factors and present how the Digital Matters Lab navigates complex
institutional legacies and fosters a formal center with a cross-campus
partnership, mission, and identity. The article concludes by looking to the
future of the Digital Matters Lab and its goals for the upcoming years,
including sustainability, a regional identity, and campus integration.
Andreas Fickers and Tim van der Heijden reflect
critically in “Inside the Trading Zone: Thinkering in a
Digital History Lab” on the practical and epistemological
challenges of doing historical research in the digital age. Their analysis
is based on a case study of the Digital History Lab and its Doctoral
Training Unit (DTU) on “Digital History and
Hermeneutics,” an interdisciplinary research and training program
established at the Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History
(C²DH) of the University of Luxembourg. The article examines the DTU as an
interdisciplinary trading zone that applies the method of “thinkering” — the term that merges the tinkering
with technology with the critical reflection on the practice of doing
digital history. Drawing on this case study, the essay addresses significant
questions related to how interdisciplinary trading zones are being
constituted in practice, and how they are situated in physical working
environments. The authors investigate the role of a physical space in
forming a trading zone from the perspectives of the spatial and
organizational framework of the DTU, experiences of the DTU doctoral
candidates, and the usage of digital methods and tools in situated digital
history research. The article constitutes an important contribution to the
discussion on “interdisciplining digital
humanities.”
Natalie Phillips, Alexander Babbitt, Soohyun Cho, Jessica
Kane, Cody Mejeur, and Craig Pearson’s essay “Creating Spaces for Interdisciplinary Research across Literature,
Neuroscience, and DH” gives a deep insight into the meaning of
interdisciplinarity in practice and the building of a space for supporting
cross-disciplinary works. The reflections are based on a case study of the
Digital Humanities and Literary Cognition Lab (DHLC) founded at Michigan
State University in 2012. The authors share their experiences, memories, and
research projects on “literary neuroscience”
lying at the intersection of DH and cognitive studies. The essay aims to
reinterpret the interdisciplinarity that is not limited to the discussion of
collaboration between different fields but, instead, involves a culture of
“chaotic space full of work, odd debates, and
fun.” This chaotic place is built by the people who represent
divergent disciplines and positions, enjoy different kinds of music, and
share common jokes. This case study shows that a laboratory is constituted
by people who are ready to take a risk, spend every moment in the lab, and
overcome any constraints. The authors summarize the most important lessons
they learned along the way, including the importance of the lab’s
nonhierarchical structure, serendipitous accidents, and the joy of working
in a group. This essay presents how a lab can expand beyond experiments into
a unified and unrivaled community.
Kathi Inman Berens, Abbey Gaterud, and Rachel Noorda’s
article “Ooligan Press: Building and Sustaining a
Feminist Digital Humanities Lab at a R-2” presents an original
model for DH infrastructure that is a lab operating under market conditions.
Ooligan Press is a not-for-profit book publishing lab where students of
Portland State University collectively own and operate the publishing house.
The history of Ooligan Press itself is an atypical example of a DH lab that
became a large-scale structured entity through a set of accidental and
atypical environments: backdoor founding, little funding, accidental
national distribution, and curriculum integration. This atypical environment
is part of what made the existence of Ooligan Press possible, what shaped
its characteristics, and what makes the press difficult to replicate in a
top-down DH lab model as opposed to the grassroots, bottom-up approach that
led to Ooligan’s success. The authors pose significant questions, rarely
discussed in the context of labs: How to connect the lab’s output
holistically to the communities it serves? What’s the role of a lab in
helping students achieve learning outcomes they seek when they enroll in a
degree program? The essay examines the lab using the M.E.A.L.S. framework
developed by Elizabeth Losh and Jacqueline Wernimont, that is, Materiality,
Embodiment, Affect, Labor, and Situatedness. The authors show how overwork
and passion are intertwined and how significant it is to build a community,
a group of people who can work together, support one another in stressful
situations, and share both the success and failure.
Cluster 2: Virtual Situatedness, Digital Practices, and
Collaboration
Alongside the physical places, DH research takes place in digital
collaboration and analysis platforms. As DH often involves teamwork and the
usage of research “materials” in a digitally shareable
form (data, code, visualizations), research practices are increasingly
performing in a digital manner. The algorithmic choices of the research
tools and collaboration platforms create architectural shapes that direct
our doings in the digital spaces. We discuss at Zoom and Skype meetings,
organize the workflow through Slack and Trello, share materials through
Github and Dropbox, and cowrite papers in Google Drive and LaTeX. We also
develop new research tools and pipelines and modify their uses to suit our
purposes. Being built by humans, the digital collaboration and analysis
software contain cultural and spatial structures that enable one kind of
activity and constrain another. Utilization of virtual collaborative spaces
sets us partially free from geographical constraints but simultaneously ties
us to other kinds of spatial and cultural dimensions. To communicate
effectively in a digital platform, one must learn the internal communication
culture of that channel.
The articles in this cluster study virtual situatedness, collaboration,
organizational structures and research practices from various perspectives.
They address virtual situatedness by exploring how DH community structures
are being shaped by the call for openness (
El
Khatib et al.) and showing how digital collaboration tools can
provide spaces for building and maintaining affective networks (see
Evalyn et al.). Being nonphysical, digital platforms enable the
easy establishment of a multitude of different kinds of
“rooms” for different purposes. Although it is easy
to start a group in Facebook, Trello, or Slack, to maintain it and make it
flourish demands conscious development of research and collaboration
practices (see
Evalyn et al.). Several articles in this cluster demonstrate
that, although the architecture of digital research and collaboration tools
push toward certain kinds of usage, the users themselves establish different
practices and employ the tools in the ways that best support their needs
(see
Evalyn et al.;
Maryl et al.). Virtually situated research practices are often
imagined in a form of a chain of problems and solution choices. This chain
can appear either in the creative usage of various tools (see
Maryl et al.) or by using the concept of a pipeline, with the
possibility to adjust different parts of the pipeline to better fit the
purposes of the study (see
Lee et al.).
Research software development is, as Bardiot and Lee et al. demonstrate, a
philosophical, technological, and practical evolution process that demands
deep knowledge of the domain, the ways data is usually studied, and profound
argumentation on how it should be studied (see also
Guldi in Cluster 1). The ways in which the scholarly
infrastructures are built not only influence the research outcomes but can
also either facilitate or complicate sharing detailed information on the
methods, peer review, and development of the field (see
Lee et al.). The articles address critical questions regarding
the quick obsolescence of digital tools and collaborative spaces. DH work
takes place in a constantly evolving and changing environment, as research
teams fluctuate over time, and software versions continuously change (see
Maryl et al.). The digital spaces are constantly changing, and
the chat “room” you entered last year might not be there
today. What will happen to the conversations that store our ideas and
demonstrate valuable collaborative development processes or the research
outcomes stored in outdated formats within a few years (see
Bardiot)? How will we ensure that we will not forget the old
knowledge while we are constantly running after the new?
Further, the articles reveal different needs of functionalities and research
and communication practices in different collaborative settings. An
individual researcher can conduct research by adjusting a pipeline developed
by another scholar (see
Lee et al.), while a research lab — or a “tree” of labs! —
hosting several intersecting research projects, must develop a multichannel
exchange of ideas and emotions (see
El
Khatib et al.;
Evalyn et al.). A research project that involves nonacademic
institutions, like the analysis of performing art with the artists, requires
a digital platform that allows documentation of the data when the artists
create it and preserves it for the scholar for later studies (see
Bardiot). Digital scholarly collaboration also comes in the forms
of openness, transparency, sharing protocols and pipelines, ideas for
different functions in a tool, and open source and interdisciplinary
exchange of ideas and methods (see
El
Khatib et al.;
Maryl et al.;
Lee et al.;
Bardiot). The increasing amount of data sets new challenges for
various fields that need to ponder their approach to vulnerable and
heterogenous digital traces (see
Bardiot) and develop new practices of digital data use (see
Maryl et al.). Through conscious choices in the practices in a
research community, it is possible to develop an affective and supportive
digital community (see
Evalyn et al.), compile information in collaboration, and
systematically build on previous findings and comparisons (see
El
Khatib et al.;
Bardiot;
Maryl et al.;
Lee et al.). The ethical questions of DH are tightly woven
together with research practices, for example, in building a research
community and collegial support (see
Evalyn et al.).
Randa El Khatib, Alyssa Arbuckle, Lynne Siemens, Ray Siemens
and Caroline Winter in “An ‘Open Lab?’ The
Electronic Textual Cultures Lab in the Evolving Digital Humanities
Landscape” begin the Cluster by analyzing the overlapping
physical and virtual space of the Canadian Social Knowledge Institute
(C-SKI), a major institution coordinating and supporting the Electronic
Textual Cultures Laboratory (ETCL), the Digital Humanities Summer Institute
(DHSI), and the Implementing New Knowledge Environments (INKE) Partnership
in Canada. Dwelling on the concept of open social scholarship
and the assumption of a correlation between the developing knowledge
landscape and the structure of an intellectual facility, the article
explores the functions of the community. It shows how the community has been
structured to support open social scholarship and explores what types of lab
infrastructure models, tools and user practices facilitate open social
scholarship. For example, a digital platform, the Canadian HSS Commons,
enables connecting, collaborating and dissemination of research among
academic institutions and with the broader public. The article is an
important contribution to our understanding on how the structures of
physical and virtual lab spaces can shape scholarly openness to the broader
society.
Lawrence Evalyn, C. E. M. Henderson, Julia King, Jessica
Lockhart, Laura Mitchell, Suzanne Conklin Akbari in “One Loveheart at a Time: The Language of Emoji and the
Building of Affective Community in the Digital Medieval Studies
Environment” analyze the Slack usage practices of the Old Books,
New Science Lab (OBNS) at the University of Toronto. The article shows how
the versatile group of faculty, postdoctoral fellows, graduate students,
undergraduates, and digital librarians created channels dedicated to various
lab tasks and developed Slack usage practices and
“languages” to meet their daily needs. For them,
Slack is not just a collaborative tool, it serves as a platform for building
and maintaining a powerful affective network that brings together the
members of the community. Informal language and rich emoji usage culture —
some created by the community members — play a crucial role in sustaining
the affective digital community. The article addresses the wider questions
of work in neoliberal academic settings and the role of the digital
community in helping to cope there. The authors state that their Slack
channel reflects the lab’s simultaneously horizontal collaborative nature
and the vertical structures that come with working in the university
settings. They identify the tension between the horizontal and vertical
aspects as productive tension, which has helped them create a community that
simultaneously supports both professional productivity and wellbeing.
Clarisse Bardiot describes in “Theatre Analytics: Developing Software for Theatre Research” the
genesis and the process of developing the free and open source tools Rekall and MemoRekall. Rekall is a digital environment for documenting and
analyzing creative digital processes, and MemoRekall is a web-based tool
that facilitates rich video annotation. The article discusses how the
development process of the tools was initially launched to address research
needs in the performing arts, the main objectives set for the tools at the
beginning of the project, and how collaboration with various user groups
helped deepen and shape the tools’ functionalities. In her article, Bardiot
raises crucial questions regarding the preservation and obsolescence of
digital traces and the technologies we use, and how new ways of thinking
about the data and developing new digital tools can push forward, adding new
analytical layers, such as “theater analytics,”
to traditional research.
Maciej Maryl, Costis Dallas, Jennifer Edmond, Jessie Labov,
Ingrida Kelpšienė, Michelle Doran, Marta Kołodziejska, and Klaudia
Grabowska present in “A Case Study Protocol for
Meta-Research into Digital Practices in the Humanities” a
protocol for the meta-analysis of DH research, based on three pilot studies.
In the pilot studies, the Digital Infrastructure for the Arts and Humanities
in Europe (DARIAH) and the Digital Methods and Practices Observatory (DiMPO)
Working Group identified divergent uses of digital tools and a variety of
research practices adjusted to the specific needs of each individual
research project. The authors propose a protocol of meta-research that
consists of a set of specific methodological guidelines for researchers
wishing to study research practices in the humanities. The protocol aims to
help the scholars produce comparable research results that will help track
and understand novel research practices and assess their impact on scholarly
activity. Thus, the article is a step toward establishing a systematic
reflection on the implication of the combination of various digital
platforms and their using practices to humanities research.
Ashley S. Lee, Poom Chiarawongse, Jo Guldi, and Andras
Zsom in “The Role of Critical Thinking in
Humanities Infrastructure. The Pipeline Concept with a Study of HaToRI
(Hansard Topic Relevance Identifier)” propose the pipeline
concept to DH research. Pipeline is a chain of algorithms that processes the
selected data using subsequent steps. As each step and used algorithm is
documented, usage of the pipeline allows replication of the study,
conducting the similar process to another dataset and altering the used
algorithms of the process to better suit one’s research. Transparency of the
process enables exploring best practices in digital research, where open
discussions about tools, their functions and interpretation can turn into
informative examples leading to development of the methods. To illustrate
how a pipeline works, the authors present the HaToRI (Hansard Topic Relevance Identifier), an open-source
pipeline-based tool for identifying thematically-linked passages in the
nineteenth-century debates of Britain's Parliament. They show how a series
of algorithms move through the steps of cleaning a corpus, organizing them
into topics, and selecting particular topics that are used to extract a
subcorpus of interest in HaToRI. The article also gives an example of how
the pipeline can be used in studying debates on property in the
nineteenth-century British Parliament.
At this point, we would like to thank all the authors for their valuable
contributions to this special issue and for their collaboration and
patience. We would like to also say a big thank you to the editor-in-chief,
Julia Flanders for giving us this wonderful opportunity, the journal editor,
Cassandra Cloutier, and other the DHQ editors for their constant help. We
also benefited a great deal from many constructive and insightful comments
of anonymous reviewers. It has been a great pleasure to work with all of
you.