Book Description:
Digital History: A Guide to Gathering, Preserving, and Presenting the Past on the Web provides for the first time a plainspoken and thorough introduction to the web for historians--teachers and students, archivists and museum curators, professors as well as amateur enthusiasts--who wish to produce online historical work or to build upon and improve the projects they have already started in this important new medium.
The book takes the reader step by step through planning a project, understanding the technologies involved and how to choose the appropriate ones, designing a site that is both easy to use and scholarly, digitizing materials in a way that makes them web-friendly while preserving their historical integrity, and reaching and responding to an intended audience effectively. It also explores the repercussions of copyright law and fair use for scholars in a digital age and examines more cutting-edge web techniques involving interactivity, such as sites that use the medium to solicit and collect historical artifacts. Finally, the book provides basic guidance for ensuring that the digital history the reader creates will not disappear in a few years. Throughout,
Digital History maintains a realistic sense of the advantages and disadvantages of putting historical documents, interpretations, and discussions online.
The authors write in a tone that makes
Digital History accessible to those with little knowledge of computers, while including a host of details that more technically savvy readers will find helpful. And although the book focuses particularly on historians, those working in related fields in the humanities and social sciences will also find this to be a useful introduction.
Digital History builds upon more than a decade of experience and expertise in creating pioneering and award-winning work by the
Center for History and New Media at
George Mason University.
Reviews:
Amazon.com
:) "Practical, comprehensive, philosophical guide for any web user. This book is extensively annotated and illustrated - Deft and witty, it is a boon to academics and the rest of us in understanding the revolution to the way we think about framing our world, it's past and present and preserving it in digital form accurately efficiently and cheaply."
:) "A remarkable mix of history and "xml", presented with a readable and often amusing text. The "screenshot" examples were very helpful."
Interviews:
History Frontiers: An Interview with Roy Rosenzweig by John H. Summers
An Interview with GMU's Roy Rosenzweig
Articles:
Roy Rosenzweig: Everyone a Historian
The Road to Xanadu: Public and Private Pathways on the History Web
Scarcity or Abundance? Preserving the Past in a Digital Era