At Gustavus, we believe in innovation in the liberal arts to drive our work. We are constantly seeking new ways to keep up with the ever evolving world, whether it be technology, social justice, break throughs in scientific research. One unique way we are driving innovation is through our digital humanities initiatives that push students and professors in new ways.
Read about a few of our digital humanities courses below:
Humanities Meets Digital
Professors Glenn Kranking, Carlos Mejia Suarez, Pamela Conners, & Micah Maatman all teach digital humanities initiatives |
Why Digital Humanities By Glenn Kranking '98, History and Scandinavian Studies
I first came across the digital humanities in graduate
school in 2007, in a course on “digital history.” I learned how
technology was shaping a field dominated by the printed word, and the
potential for new approaches, new connections, and new ways of
presenting findings. I was fascinated by how a historian could work with
data collected in archives to create projects beyond a standard
research paper. I liked that digital projects tend to be public, which
shifts the audience from professors and academics only toward engagement
with the public.
I taught a digital history course my first January Interim Experience at Gustavus, in 2010. Students focused on using technology to research and present their scholarly findings. A primary learning outcome (as in most courses in the digital humanities) was to increase digital fluency. That means more than just being able to read and use digital materials. It means engaging in broader discussions to both critically analyze and create digital resources.
The digital humanities are driven by technology, but they are grounded in the long tradition of inquiry and study of humanities through the liberal arts. Here at Gustavus we are asking the questions we have always asked, using different methodologies and new digital tools to research and present.
The College is currently in the second year of a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to broaden the footprint of digital humanities on campus. As one of the campus facilitators, I am joined by Denis Crnković, professor of Russian and director of Comparative Literature and Russian and Eastern European studies, who has used digital tools in textual analysis for decades; and Eric Dugdale, classics professor and associate provost and dean of education, who has students digitally transcribe and analyze ancient text.
In June, interested faculty participated in a week-long workshop to develop a digitally driven course for this upcoming January Interim Experience. The broader objective is to inflect digital learning across the curriculum, offering our students new opportunities in the humanities. Already in these courses, students have become more than consumers of technology, they have become digital creators, within the liberal arts tradition of critical inquiry. Through such innovation, we believe we position our students to use their liberal arts education to live and act on the great challenges of our time, with all of the tools available to them in our time.
Course: The War On Drugs by Carlos Mejia Suarez, Spanish and Modern Languages
In this course, groups of students created digital visual representations
of aspects of the war on drugs—from a video detailing changes in brain
synapses under the influence of cocaine to an interactive timeline of
Pablo Escobar’s empire. “In every decision, students were thinking about
the level of interactivity,” Mejia says. “They had to understand
storytelling as it related to interactivity, aesthetics, and their
arguments.”
For a complex issue like the war on drugs, there were plenty of lightbulb moments for students regarding the global drug trade. “They had to simplify the digital delivery while keeping the complexity of the issue,” Mejia says. Extra synergy: the student-run conference Building Bridges tackled the same topic, and projects made in this course were released to the public on the Building Bridges website.
For a complex issue like the war on drugs, there were plenty of lightbulb moments for students regarding the global drug trade. “They had to simplify the digital delivery while keeping the complexity of the issue,” Mejia says. Extra synergy: the student-run conference Building Bridges tackled the same topic, and projects made in this course were released to the public on the Building Bridges website.
“The interactive portion gave us, as students, an opportunity to connect what we learned about each aspect of drugs. It was truly the most intriguing class I have ever had.” —Brecklyn Schmidt ’19
Course: Food as Communication by Pamela Conners, Communication Studies
In this class, students identified
challenges the Gustavus dining service has communicating with the
campus, and developing digital tools to help. (For instance: one project
aimed to bring nutritional information on daily Caf offerings to
students’ phones.) A surprise to Conners was students’ learning curve in
creatingdigital tools. “Students are comfortable making videos on their
laptops or using apps and social media. But the creation and
imagination behind the tools really stretched them.”
For 2017, says Conners, “I’m going to have students think more broadly: What do we decide is ‘good’ food, and how have standards changedover time?” Digital humanities offers a different way of seeing, Conners says. “As a communication scholar, that is always what I’m trying to help my students do.”
For 2017, says Conners, “I’m going to have students think more broadly: What do we decide is ‘good’ food, and how have standards changedover time?” Digital humanities offers a different way of seeing, Conners says. “As a communication scholar, that is always what I’m trying to help my students do.”
“I learned that marketing food is very hard—trying to get the customer to buy your product but also being truthful and giving them the product they want. Gaining customer satisfaction is tricky.” —Olivia Hass ’19
Course: Arts Entrepreneurship by Micah Maatman, Theatre and Dance
“In
theatre design, a lot of the practice is naturally digital,” says
Maatman. To make it an intentional part of the scholarship, this course
created two artistic experiences: a physical, three-dimensional space in
Schaefer Gallery, and a companion exhibit in a digital space.
The project, says Maatman, was largely determined by who signed up—in
this case, many visual artists. “I initially had scripted how that was
going to go,” Maatman says. “But the students said, ‘We don’t need this
much structure.’”
Maatman took his hands off in the last few weeks, and it was deserving considering their ambition. “I gave the students a lot of freedom and they appreciated it.” Digital humanities makes great sense in the study of visual arts, says Maatman. “It takes lessons from the arts and applies them to the humanities. It’s the merging of creativity and academic scholarship.”
Maatman took his hands off in the last few weeks, and it was deserving considering their ambition. “I gave the students a lot of freedom and they appreciated it.” Digital humanities makes great sense in the study of visual arts, says Maatman. “It takes lessons from the arts and applies them to the humanities. It’s the merging of creativity and academic scholarship.”
“To be able to create a design online with a group was something new and useful, and being hands on and creating a physical space is something undergrad art students don’t often experience.” —Lauren Ihle ’18
Questions? Media Contact: Director of Media Relations and Internal Communication JJ Akin
jakin@gustavus.edu; 507-933-7510