Mason Archival Repository Service

Browsing Centers and Institutes by Title

Browsing Centers and Institutes by Title

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  • Cohen, Dan; Hitchcock, Tim; Rockwell, Geoffrey; Sander, Jörg; Shoemaker, Robert; Sinclair, Stéfan; Takats, Sean; Turkel, William (Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2011)
    The Datamining with Criminal Intent project brings together three online resources: the Old Bailey Online, Zotero and TAPoR. It allows users to study the rich Old Bailey resource (127 milllion words of trial accounts), ...
  • The Echo Project (2007-02-19)
    Over the past forty years the world of finance has changed dramatically, and one way to trace this evolution is through the technology that mediates the interaction between man and his money. The advent of Instinet, the ...
  • Various (Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, 2011)
    In connection with Teaching American History grants, teachers from around the country visit Washington, D.C., on a regular basis, but they visit each museum separately and the experience is linked only by geography. The ...
  • Brennan, Sheila A. (Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press, 2012)
    Patriotic commemorations flowered following World War I in the United States, as did campaigns for securing limited- issue federal postage stamps. Beginning in 1920 with the Pilgrim Tercentenary issue, commemorative ...
  • Hodgdon, Samuel (2013-08-30)
  • Cohen, Dan (2008-11-12)
  • Shafroth, Frank (Center for State and Local Government Leadership, George Mason University, 2013-09-01)
    Detroit filed for municipal bankruptcy protection on July 19, 2013. The city is in dire fiscal straits and now in a U.S, bankruptcy court for what the city’s emergency manager termed “the Olympics of restructuring.” The ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-03-06)
    In our inaugural podcast our feature story covers the controversy over whether Wikipedia is a useful or problematic resource for students. In the news roundup, we wonder if the launch of Windows Vista has any significance, ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-03-21)
    In our second podcast, we revisit the debate over Wikipedia, including hearing from Mills about how Cambodians are using it (and whether you can find a WiFi signal in the jungle of Cambodia). Our feature story explores ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-04-04)
    Our third podcast begins with some discussion of April Fools’ pranks, including a great one about Google acquiring the OCLC, and how blogs and the internet can foster hoaxes. This week’s feature takes a look at ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-04-17)
    Can social networking sites like Facebook play a productive role in the humanities? In this episode Dan plays the old fogey, while Tom and Mills talk about how to use these sites in an advantageous way. We also report on ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-05-02)
    We take a break from our normal format to spend the entirety of this episode thinking about the role of technology—its great power to forge social bonds and enable a new kind of memorialization, as well as its unfortunate ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-05-16)
    Web design guru Jeremy Boggs joins Dan, Tom, and Mills to discuss the past, present, and future of designing websites for academia, museums, and libraries. In the news roundup, we cover a number of situations where information ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-05-30)
    Bill Turkel joins us on the podcast to discuss his fascinating work on “history appliances,” or the possibility of making history more real by creating physical environments and interfaces that truly immerse us in the past. ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-06-13)
    How can you learn technical skills such as web design, programming, and related methods and technologies for work in the digital humanities? We tackle that difficult question on this week’s show, while also covering the ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-07-03)
    What are students, researchers, and librarians supposed to do with the tremendous volume of digitized scholarly materials now available to them? We discuss the problem of information overload in this week’s feature segment. ...
  • Center for History and New Media (2007-07-18)
    Dan, Mills, and Tom celebrate the tenth edition of Digital Campus with part one in a new series on blogs and blogging. In this episode, we take a look back at how we became bloggers, examine questions of subject matter, ...
  • Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, / (2013-11-08)
    For our hundredth anniversary episode, the digital history fellows divided up the 2007 episodes of Digital Campus and picked their favorite bits — listen to the result if you dare, and be transported back to the days when ...
  • Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, / (2013-11-21)
    In this, the first episode of the new Digital Campus century, Mills, Stephen, and Amanda were joined by two new Digital History Fellows, Spencer Roberts and Anne Ladyem McDivitt. Our first story is possibly the most important ...
  • Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, / (2013-12-18)
    In this year-end roundup/predictions episode of our Digital Campus podcast, Stephen and special guest Sharon Leon jumped in on this year’s cheers and jeers, listing the best and worst stories and events of 2013, including ...

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