Camlot, Jason ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1378-6562, Neugebauer, Tomasz ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9743-5910, Berrizbeitia, Francisco ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1542-8435, Ben, Joseph, Bustamante, Alexandre and Gandham, Sukesh (2022) Archive of the Digital Present (ADP), COVID-19 Period: Collecting and Visualizing Metadata of Online Literary Events Hosted in Canada, March 2020 - September 2021. In: DH2022: International Conference on Digital Humanities, 25-29 July 2022, Tokyo (Virtual Conference).
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Abstract
Archive of the Digital Present for Online Literary Performance in Canada (COVID-19 Pandemic Period) is a research and development project that arises out of the need to address foundational, practical and theoretical research questions about the impact of the recent (and ongoing) COVID-19 pandemic, and attendant social disruptions and restrictions, upon literary communities in Canada through the study of organised literary events as they have occurred online since March 2020.
The papers that constitute this panel focus on the design and development work pursued in building a searchable, open access database and directory – The Archive of the Digital Present (ADP) – to allow scholars, literary practitioners, and the public to gain knowledge about the nature and significance of literary events (online, hybrid, and in-person) that have occurred during the pandemic period, through the collection and structuring of metadata, and, in some cases, with direction to audiovisual (AV) documentation of the events themselves as they were held using platforms such as Zoom and YouTube.
Our papers explain key facets of development by presenting approaches to (1) data collection and structuring, (2) stack development, (3) data visualisation, and (4) front end design, that have emerged through the process of community and user-oriented design research and development used to create the ADP.
Divisions: | Concordia University > Faculty of Arts and Science > English Concordia University > Library |
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Item Type: | Conference or Workshop Item (Paper) |
Refereed: | Yes |
Authors: | Camlot, Jason and Neugebauer, Tomasz and Berrizbeitia, Francisco and Ben, Joseph and Bustamante, Alexandre and Gandham, Sukesh |
Date: | 29 July 2022 |
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Funders: |
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ID Code: | 990736 |
Deposited By: | Tomasz Neugebauer |
Deposited On: | 29 Jul 2022 22:21 |
Last Modified: | 29 Jul 2022 22:23 |
Related URLs: |
References:
Angular: The modern web developer's platform. (n.d.). https://angular.io/ (accessed 27 July 2022).Camlot, Jason. (2013). The Sound of Canadian Modernisms: The Sir George Williams University Poetry Series, 1966-1974. Journal of Canadian Studies / Revue d’études canadiennes, 46(3): 28-59.
Camlot, Jason , Neugebauer, Tomasz and Berrizbeitia, Francisco. (2020). Dynamic Systems for Humanities Audio Collections : The Theory and Rationale of Swallow. DH2020 (Digital Humanities 2020 Virtual Conference), 23 July 2020, Ottawa, Canada. https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/987014/ (accessed 10 April 2022).
Fong, Deanna, and Karis Shearer. (2018). Gender, Affective Labour, and Community Building Through Literary Audio Artifacts. SpokenWebBlog. https://spokenweb.ca/spokenweblog/ (accessed 20 April 2022).
GraphQL: A query language for your API. (n.d.). GraphQL. https://graphql.org/ (accessed 9 December 2021).
Martin, Bella, and Bruce M Hanington. (2012). Universal Methods of Design: 100 Ways to Research Complex Problems, Develop Innovative Ideas, and Design Effective Solutions. Beverly, MA: Rockport.
Meilisearch. (n.d.). Meilisearch Github Repository. https://github.com/meilisearch/meilisearch (accessed 27 July 2022).
Spinuzzi, Clay. (2005). The Methodology of Participatory Design. Technical Communication, 52(2): 163–74.
Strapi: Open source Node.js headless CMS to easily build customisable APIs. (n.d.). Strapi Github Repository. https://github.com/strapi/strapi (accessed 9 December 2021).
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