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                  <text>Digital archiving is gaining increased attention by both the general public and the scholarly community. The proliferation of digital content through networked channels raises cultural awareness of the ephemeral as well as ubiquitous nature of digitization. This collection highlights critical arguments regarding the digital humanities and digital archiving. The featured studies provide a broad cultural context and essential questions for archive creation and scholarly digital humanities research.</text>
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                <text>RB203: From Digital Uprising to Digital Society</text>
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                <text>“RB203: From Digital Uprising to Digital Society” is a podcast episode published and released by The Platform on June 1st, 2012. This podcast will be an exemplary addition to the archiving website because it takes a real life historical event and relates it into terms of digital media and how ever advancing and changing technology can be used to control masses of people. Specifically, how whether or not digital media and digital technology had a direct impact in bringing about the “Arab Spring”. The Arab Spring is defined as “a series of anti-government protests, uprisings, and armed rebellions that spread across much of the Arab world in the early 2010s.” These questions lead the podcast to delve into the specific communications infrastructure of the country of Tunisia, and how its government controlled digital technology may have played a major role in the protests. This is a great podcast episode to listen to because it relates what seems to be a simple idea, and connects it into the destruction of an entire government and the surrounding countries. It is immensely important for students to learn how the actions we make through technology can have a negative impact and can be used by a government to control its citizens. </text>
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                <text>Clara Pulido, Jacquelyn Curtin, Truc Duong</text>
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                <text>The Platform, January 6, 2012. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/rb203-from-digital-uprising-to-digital-society/id298096088?i=1000379213771.</text>
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                  <text>Digital archiving is gaining increased attention by both the general public and the scholarly community. The proliferation of digital content through networked channels raises cultural awareness of the ephemeral as well as ubiquitous nature of digitization. This collection highlights critical arguments regarding the digital humanities and digital archiving. The featured studies provide a broad cultural context and essential questions for archive creation and scholarly digital humanities research.</text>
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                <text>“Digital Humanities and Digital Media: conversations on politics, cultures, aesthetics, and literacy” is a book written by Roberto Simanowski. Unlike the previous item additions that we have added to the archive, this one is fairly new, being published in the year 2016. It is defined by critics as “exceptionally relatable” and a “very lively and engaging” take; turning an overcomplicated matter to one of very simple divided parts. Simanowski takes a very different approach in his novel than we have seen in many others in this category. He interviews many different “key figures” in the Digital Humanities field from different eras in time to show the quickly progressive and always changing state of digital media. Not only is Simanowski a writer, but he is a skilled journalist with many years of experience in interviewing others in a professional but easily relatable manner. He ensures that all his interviews share the same common key points and fields while also asking very key specific questions that relate to each individual interviewee. This text would be an important addition to the archiving website because it is in a style that is different than many others, adding a new potential way for students to learn. </text>
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                <text>Clara Pulido, Jacquelyn Curtin, Truc Duong</text>
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                <text> podcast_midland-pictures-fm_data-management-archiving_1000427525667</text>
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                <text>Simanowski, roberto. Open Humanities Press, n.d. https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/midland-pictures-fm/id1369269749.</text>
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                <text>“Archiving” by Digital Writing and Research Lab is a family-friendly podcast episode released and published March 18th, 2014. In this episode of the archive the host, Megan Eatman, speaks to members of the Digital Writing and Research Lab’s Digital Archiving group alongside co-chair Rappaport’s Center’s Human Rights Archive Working Group. They discuss their various approaches and struggles when it comes to the world of digital archiving. The episode typically focuses on the challenges of having to build an entire digital archiving website from scratch and their struggles with making sure they are gathering the necessary different forms of media that are seen as necessary for creating an authentic and efficient digital archiving platform. This episode of this podcast is a great addition to the archiving website because you hear first hand experiences of experts in the field of archiving go into details on the struggles they face that are typical struggles that most of us will most likely have to deal with in the realm of digital archiving. Not only do they speak about their own personal experiences, they give advice to others through a variety of given questions submitted by listeners who plan on being involved. </text>
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                <text>Digital Writing and Research Lab, March 18, 2014. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/archiving/id579303935?i=1000280229049</text>
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                <text>Delivering digital images: cultural heritage resources for education</text>
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                <text>“Delivering digital images: cultural heritage resources for education” by Patricia McClung and Christie Stephenson. The book was originally published in the year 1998. The book focuses on the importance of digitizing images that reflect cultural heritage in order to preserve as much as possible from cultural days and events of significance. The purpose of the novel is to inform readers on the correct way to preserve moments of cultural history with respect and efficiency. This is a very important aspect in terms of digitization because many moments of historical importance are lost and forgotten, but carry years of history and valuable information. The preservation of these moments and their availability to the public has always been an issue in question and the respect of cultures is often disregarded when archiving such important images in history. This would be an extremely important addition to the archiving website because it is important to keep in mind different cultures and heritages when digitizing their information in a respectful manner. There have been many instances in which historical moments of inidgenious history have been digitized in a disrespectful manner and available to many readers who are not using the images for their intended use. This book highlights this issue amongst many others in order to ensure the utmost respect and correctness when uploading digitized photos that reflect different cultural moments in history.</text>
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                <text>Partrica McClung; Christie Stephenson</text>
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                <text>Clara Pulido, Jacquelyn Curtin, Truc Duong</text>
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            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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                <text>ISBN: 9780892365081</text>
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                <text>Stephenson, Christie D., and Patricia A. McClung. Delivering Digital Images: Cultural Heritage Resources for Education. Los Angeles, CA: Getty Information Institute, 1998.</text>
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                <text>The Early Americas Digital Archive by Ralph Bauer is a collection of works that provides access to various forms of literature such as: poems, prose, histories, diaries, journals, and letters written in or about the Americas from 1492 to approximately 1820. This archive was made  as an attempt to help preserve the literature from English and Spanish text in the Early Americas  and to allow others to read and analyze the pieces years after their creation. These works are from the Early Americas digital archive (EADS) database and the Gateway to early American authors on the web are available for others to access.</text>
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                <text>Baur, Ralph. Early Americas Digital Archive. Library of Congress, 2003. https://catalog.loc.gov/vwebv/search?searchCode=LCCN&amp;searchArg=2003542969&amp;searchType=1&amp;permalink=y.</text>
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                <text>Digital Archives: Management, Access and Use offers an overview of the constantly evolving technological changes and improvements in the world and how digital archiving is affected by this. This book provides insights from international experts who contribute information on the changes in archives and what these changes mean in the long run. These experts also weigh-in on building digital archives, offering solutions to obstacles in planning and curating an archive while discussing the tools needed to aid with changes in the digital humanities. The book is separated into two parts; the first part, titled “Drivers for Modern Digital Archives” covers the basics of digital archives, managing possible “turbulence” or overcoming computer-related obstacles, legal issues involving digital archives, and scientific information policies. The entire second part of the book, titled “Case Studies,” covers a case study between two oral histories. This book offers basic information about Digital Archiving, while delving deeper into the management of a digital archive.  This book also offers a section that covers recent developments in the archive world, and even offers a “How to Read this Book” section that breaks down abbreviations and provides suggestions on the order to read the book (in the order they appear). This book offers an in-depth look at managing digital archives and is good for archivists and researchers alike. </text>
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                <text>Dobreva, Milena. Digital Archives : Management, Access and Use. Facet Books for Archivists and Records Managers. London: Facet Publishing, 2018. </text>
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                  <text>Digital archiving is gaining increased attention by both the general public and the scholarly community. The proliferation of digital content through networked channels raises cultural awareness of the ephemeral as well as ubiquitous nature of digitization. This collection highlights critical arguments regarding the digital humanities and digital archiving. The featured studies provide a broad cultural context and essential questions for archive creation and scholarly digital humanities research.</text>
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                <text>This article documents the professional and intellectual developments in the field of Digital Humanities and Digital Literary Studies in Mexico. It begins by surveying the evolution of scholarship production regarding digital archives, the media impact on the significance of archives, the accessibility of archives, and complexities in the preservation of archives. The article proceeds to explore the intersection of digital archives in Mexico with the origin and fortification of the Digital Humanities in the United States, highlighting the manner in which these junctions have promoted the establishment of appropriate methods and vocabularies to use in the examination of digitized and born-digital materials and productions. It concludes by examining various Mexican digital projects recently developed, proposing the uniqueness of Mexican literary scholarship on the digital humanities, emphasizing its decolonial perspectives, community building, and creative educational endeavors. Ortega denotes the exponential growth of Digital Humanities in Mexico, particularly under the disciplines of information sciences, communications, and philosophy. Digital literary projects and textual academia hold some major representation in Mexico as well, coming in numerous forms depending on objectives, the collections and subjects they deal with, and the institutional support that accompanies them. Among the projects that stand out the most in the Mexican practice of the digital humanities, Ortega underlines, one must recognize the archival developments of projects such as the libraries of the UNAM.</text>
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                <text>Élika Ortega. “Archives, Libraries, Collections, and Databases: A First Look at Digital Literary Studies in Mexico” 86, no. 2 (2018): 229–47. doi:10.1353/hir.2018.0016.</text>
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