Criação, manutenção e divulgação de projetos de História em meios digitais: git, GitHub e o Programming Historian

Bibliografia para o webinar organizado pelo LHUD/FGV/CPDCO

Eric Brasil

20 de maio de 2022

  • ALVES, Daniel. Ensinar Humanidades Digitais sem as Humanidades Digitais: um olhar a partir das licenciaturas em História. Revista EducaOnline, v. 15, n. 2, p. 5–26, 2021.

  • BAKER, James. Preservar os seus dados de investigação.* The Programming Historian em português*, Trad. Márcia T. Cavalcanti. n. 1, 2021. Disponível em: https://programminghistorian.org/pt/licoes/preservar-os-seus-dados-de-investigacao. Acesso em: 12 maio 2021.

  • BLANEY, Jonathan; MILLGAN, Sarah; STEER, Martin; et al. Doing digital history: a beginner’s guide to working with text as data. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2021. (IHR research guides).

  • BRASIL, Eric; NASCIMENTO, Leonardo Fernandes. História digital: reflexões a partir da Hemeroteca Digital Brasileira e do uso de CAQDAS na reelaboração da pesquisa histórica. Revista Estudos Históricos, v. 33, n. 69, p. 196–219, 2020.

  • CRYMBLE, Adam. Technology and the Historian: Transformations in the Digital Age. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2021. (Topics in the Digital Humanities).

  • ELO, Kimmo. Big Data, Bad Metadata: A Methodological Note on the Importance of Good Metadata in the Age of Digital History. In: FRIDLUND, Mats; OIVA, Mila; PAJU, Petri (Orgs.). Digital Histories: Emergent Approaches within the New Digital History. [s.l.]: Helsinki University Press, 2020, p. 103–111.

  • FICKERS, Andreas. Veins filled with the Diluted Sap of Rationality: A Critical Reply to Rens Bod. BMGN - Low Countries Historical Review, v. 128, n. 4, p. 155–163, 2013.

  • FRIDLUND, Mats. Digital history 1.5: A middle way between normal and paradigmatic digital historical research. In: Digital histories: Emergent approaches within the new digital history. Helsinki: Helsinki University Press, 2020, p. 69–87.

  • FRIDLUND, Mats; OIVA, Mila; PAJU, Petri (Orgs.). Digital Histories: Emergent Approaches within the New Digital History. Helsinki: Helsinki University Press, 2020.

  • GALLOWAY, Alexander R. The Interface Effect. Cambridge: Polity, 2012.

  • HECHL, Stefan; LANGLAIS, Pierre-Carl; MARJANEN, Jani; et al. Digital interfaces of historical newspapers: opportunities, restrictions and recommendations. Journal of Data Mining & Digital Humanities, v. HistoInformatics, 2021.

  • HEIJDEN, Tim van der; FICKERS, Andreas. Inside the Trading Zone: Thinkering in a Digital History Lab. Digital Humanities Quarterly, v. 14, n. 3, 2020.

  • HITCHCOCK, Tim. Confronting the Digital: Or How Academic History Writing Lost the Plot. Cultural and Social History, v. 10, n. 1, p. 9–23, 2013.

  • JENSEN, Helle Strandgaard. Digital Archival Literacy for (all) Historians. Media History, v. 27, n. 2, p. 251–265, 2021.

  • KEMMAN, Max. Trading Zones of Digital History. Berlin: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2021.

  • LÄSSIG, Simone. Digital History. Geschichte und Gesellschaft, v. 47, n. 1, p. 5–34, 2021.

  • LUCCHESI, Anita. For a New Hermeneutics of Practice in Digital Public History: Thinkering with memorecord.uni.lu. University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg, 2020.

  • MARRES, Noortje; WELTEVREDE, Esther. Scraping the Social? Journal of Cultural Economy, v. 6, n. 3, p. 313–335, 2013.

  • MCCLURKEN, Jeffrey (Org.). The Programming Historian. Journal of American History, v. 103, n. 1, p. 299.2-301, 2016.

  • MILLIGAN, Ian. History in the Age of Abundance?: How the Web Is Transforming Historical Research. 328. ed. London; Chicago: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2019.

  • PACHER, Andreas. Record how you search, not just what you find: Thoughtfully constructed search terms greatly enhance the reliability of digital research. Disponível em: https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2013/06/10/record-how-you-search-not-just-what-you-find/. Acesso em: 19 maio 2022.

  • PFANZELTER, Eva; OBERBICHLER, Sarah; MARJANEN, Jani; et al. Digital interfaces of historical newspapers: opportunities, restrictions and recommendations. Journal of Data Mining and Digital Humanities, 2020.

  • PUTNAM, Lara. The Transnational and the Text-Searchable: Digitized Sources and the Shadows They Cast. The American Historical Review, v. 121, n. 2, p. 377–402, 2016.

  • RÖHLE, Bernhard Rieder Theo; RIEDER, Bernhard. Digital Methods: Five Challenges. In: BERRY, David M. (Org.). Understanding Digital Humanities. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2012, p. 67–84.

  • ROMEIN, C. Annemieke; KEMMAN, Max; BIRKHOLZ, Julie M.; et al. State of the Field: Digital History. History, v. 105, n. 365, p. 291–312, 2020.

  • SALMI, Hannu. What is Digital History? 1ª edição. Cambridge: Polity, 2020. (What is History? Series).

  • ZAAGSMA, Gerben. On Digital History. BMGN - Low Countries Historical Review, v. 128, n. 4, p. 3–29, 2013.