Half of the work of the Endings project has been focused on knowledge mobilization. Here we list all the publications, presentations, and workshops we have produced.
La moitié du travail du projet Endings s'est concentrée sur la mobilisation des connaissances. Nous dressons ici la liste de toutes les publications, présentations et ateliers que nous avons organisés.
Publications: Special issue of DHQ
Publications : Numéro spécial de DHQ
Our flagship publication is the special edition of Digital Humanities Quarterly entitled Project Resiliency, edited by Martin Holmes, Matt Huculak, and Janelle Jenstad. These are the articles in that issue:
Notre publication phare est le numéro spécial de Digital Humanities Quarterly intitulé Project Resiliency, édité par Martin Holmes, Matt Huculak et Janelle Jenstad. Voici les articles de ce numéro :
- Introduction to Special Issue: Project Resiliency in the Digital Humanities. Martin Holmes, University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre; Janelle Jenstad, University of Victoria Department of English; J. Matthew Huculak, University of Victoria Advanced Research Services & Digital Scholarship Librarian.
- The Stories We Tell: Project Narratives, Project Endings, and the Affective Value of Collaboration. Claire Battershill, University of Toronto.
No Boutique or Fashionable Technologies
: Project Development, Mentorship, and Sustainability in an Innovation-First World. Constance Crompton, Department of Communication, University of Ottawa.- Academics Retire and Servers Die: Adventures in the Hosting and Storage of Digital Humanities Projects. James Cummings, Newcastle University.
- The Dangers of Disappearance, the Opportunities of Recovery. Sara Diamond, OCAD University Faculty of Arts & Science.
- Doing it for Ourselves: The New Archive Built by and Responsive to the Researcher. Nick Thieberger, School of Languages and Linguistics, University of Melbourne, Australia.
Follow the Money?
: Funding and Digital Sustainability. Jessica Otis, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University.- From Tamagotchis to Pet Rocks: On Learning to Love Simplicity through the Endings Principles. Martin Holmes, University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre; Joey Takeda, Digital Humanities Innovation Lab, Simon Fraser University. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8329564.
- Reference Rot in the Digital Humanities Literature: An Analysis of Citations Containing Website Links in DHQ. Zach Coble, New York University Libraries; Jojo Karlin, New York University Libraries.
- The Project Endings Interviews: A Summary of Methodological Foundations. Emily Comeau, University of British Columbia.
Other publications
Autres publications
- Arneil, Stewart. 2023.
Planning for Sustainability: A Reality Check from the Development Team.
IDEAH, Vol 3 Iss./ 5. DOI: https://doi.org/10.21428/f1f23564.00227403. - Carlin, Claire et al. 2018.
Endings: Concluding, Archiving, and Preserving, Digital Projects for Long-Term Usability.
KULA: Knowledge Creation, Dissemination, and Preservation Studies, 2(1), p.19. DOI: http://doi.org/10.5334/kula.35. - Goddard, L. 2023.
What’s Left When It’s Over: Libraries and Digital Humanities Project Preservation.
IDEAH. v. 3 no. 5, Jul 18, 2023. DOI: https://doi.org/10.21428/f1f23564.00188fc5 - Goddard, Lisa, and Dean Seeman. 2019.
Negotiating Sustainability: Building Digital Humanities Projects that Last.
Doing More Digital Humanities, Routledge, pp. 38–57. - Holmes, Martin, and Joey Takeda. 2019.
Beyond Validation: Using Programmed Diagnostics to Learn About, Monitor, and Successfully Complete Your DH Project.
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 34, Issue Supplement_1, December 2019, Pages i100–i109 Oxford University Press/EADH. 2019. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqz011.
Presentations
Présentations
-
Arneil, Stewart, and Martin Holmes. 2017.
Archiving form and function: preserving a 2003 digital project.
DPASSH Conference 2017: Digital Preservation for Social Sciences and Humanities, Brighton, UK. 14 September 2017. Video. - Arneil, Stewart, Martin Holmes and Greg Newton. 2019.
Project Endings: Early Impressions From Our Recent Survey On Project Longevity In DH.
Digital Humanities 2019 Conference, Utrecht, Netherlands. 10 July 2019. Slide deck -
Arneil, Stewart, Martin Holmes and Greg Newton. 2019.
Clearing the Air for Maintenance and Repair: Strategies, Experiences, Full Disclosure; Paper Three: Ruthless Principles for Digital Longevity.
Digital Humanities 2019 Conference, Utrecht, Netherlands. 12 July 2019. Slide deck -
Carlin, Claire. 2017.
Humanities in the digital age: A quiet revolution—How the digital humanities are changing the research landscape.
Masterminds Lecture Series 2019, University of Victoria. April 2019. - Carlin, Claire. 2019.
Mistakes Were Made: A TEI Project after Sixteen Years.
Conference of the Text Encoding Initiative, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC. 14 November 2017. - Carlin, Claire. 2020.
Ça dépend : Le défi de la conservation des projets numériques.
Colloque Humanista, Bordeaux, France. 20 May 2020. https://zenodo.org/record/3836506. - Carlin, Claire, Martin Holmes, Matt Huculak, and Pat Szpak. 2021.
Principes de la pérennité numérique: On commence à la fin.
Les données numériques, une espèce en voie de d’extinction,
Conférence archivage numérique - 20 ans PIN/Aristote, Assocation des archivistes français, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris, décembre 2021. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8329570. - Comeau, Emily. 2018.
Endings: Concluding, Archiving and Preserving Digital Projects for Long-Term Usability.
The Chicago Colloquium on Digital Humanities and Computer Science. 10 November 2018. -
Czaykowska-Higgins, Ewa, and Sarah M. Kell
Why do print at all? Constructing a ‘dictionary’ for the future
. SHARP Conference 2017: Technologies of the Book, Victoria, BC, Canada. 10 June 2017. -
Czaykowska-Higgins, Ewa and Sarah M. Kell. 2017.
Using TEI for Language Documentation Projects: The Nxaʔamxčín Database and Dictionary.
Conference of the Text Encoding Initiative, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC. 11 November 2017. -
Davis, Corey. 2017.
A Website on the Shelf: Libraries and the Challenges of Digital Preservation.
SHARP Conference 2017: Technologies of the Book, Victoria, BC, Canada. 10 June 2017. -
Goddard, Lisa. 2018.
The Endings Project @ UVic: Concluding, Archiving, and Preserving Digital Projects for Long-Term Usability.
@Risk North 2: Digital Collections, Montreal, Canada. 9 November 2018. - Goddard, Lisa.
Decay, or What's Left When It's Over: The Librarians' Perspective
, Open Digital Collaborative Project Preservation in the Humanities. DHSI, June 2021, Online. -
Goddard, Lisa, and Christine Walde. 2017.
Negotiating Sustainability: The Grant Services ‘Menu’ at UVic Libraries.
Digital Humanities 2017 Conference, Montreal, Canada. August 2017. -
Holmes, Martin. 2017.
Selecting Technologies for Long-Term Survival.
SHARP Conference 2017: Technologies of the Book, Victoria, BC, Canada. 10 June 2017. -
Holmes, Martin, and Greg Newton. 2022.
How big can a static site be? Staticizing a census database..
Digital Humanities 2022 Conference, Tokyo (online). 28 July 2022. -
Holmes, Martin and Joseph Takeda. 2017.
Beyond Validation: Using Programmed Diagnostics to Learn About, Monitor, and Successfully Complete Your DH Project.
Digital Humanities 2017 Conference, Montreal, Canada. 8 August 2017. -
Holmes, Martin and Joseph Takeda. 2018.
Why do I need four search engines?
Japanese Association for Digital Humanities Conference, Tokyo, Japan. 11 September 2018. -
Holmes, Martin and Joseph Takeda. 2019.
The Prefabricated Website: Who needs a server anyway?
Text Encoding Initiative Conference, Graz, Austria. 19 September 2019. -
Holmes, Martin and Joseph Takeda. 2020.
Static Search: An Archivable and Sustainable Search Engine for the Digital Humanities
Digital Humanities Summer Institute Colloquium (#VirtualDHSI). 6 June 2020. -
Holmes, Martin and Joseph Takeda. 2020.
Nine Projects, One Codebase: A Static Search Engine for Digital Editions.
COLLABORATION Digital Humanities Conference, University of British Columbia / online. 31 October 2020. -
Huculak, J. Matthew. 2018.
The Endings Project: Concluding, Archiving, and Preserving Digital Projects for Long-Term Usability.
After the Digital Revolution Workshop 2, London, UK. 26 January 2018. -
Huculak, J. Matthew and Claire Carlin. 2019.
Stories of Loss: Fragility in the Archive.
CSDH/SCHN Digital Humanities Conference 2019, Vancouver, BC, Canada. 4 June 2019. -
Jenstad, Janelle. Keynote Provocation. 2017.
If I were starting MoEML now…: Planning for Linked Data and Digital Preservation.
Linked Pasts III: New Voices, Old Places, Stanford University, 2017. - Jenstad, Janelle, and Martin Holmes. 2022.
What the Book Got Right, or, Lots of Static Copies Keep Stuff Safe.
(Conference presentation.) Conference of the Bibliographical Society of Canada. 17 May 2022. - Jenstad, Janelle. 2023.
‘The end is where we start from’: The Endings Principles.
Expert Workshop on Digital Publication of Right-to-Left Script Corpora, hosted by the Open Islamicate Texts Initiative Arabic-script OCR Catalyst Project (OpenITI AOCP) at the University of Maryland. https://openiti.org/2023workshop/. - Lucaniec, Megan, Sally Cartwright, Erin Hashimoto, Emma Pearce-Marvell, Jamie Quibell,
Bethany Scholfield, and Martin Holmes. 2021.
Using open-source, sustainable tools for language reclamation: Preliminary findings from building a digital corpus of Wendat.
7th International Conference on Language Documentation and Conservation (ICLDC 7), 2021, Hawaii, USA. / online. Video. 4 March 2021. -
Takeda, Joseph. 2018.
Ending Your Digital Humanities Project from the Start.
Pixelating: University of British Columbia DH Mixer. 28 June 2018. -
Takeda, Joseph. 2021.
Sustainable StoryMaps: A Case Study in Staticization with StoryMapJS.
GIS Day 2021. Simon Fraser University and the University of British Columbia / online. 19 November 2021. -
Takeda, Joseph, and Martin Holmes. 2022.
Serverless Searching with XSLT and JavaScript.
Balisage 2022 Conference (online). 1 August 2022.
Workshops
Ateliers
Endings: How to End (and Archive) your Digital Project.
Martin Holmes, Janelle Jenstad and Claire Carlin, with Stewart Arneil, Ewa Czaykowska-Higgins, John Durno, Lisa Goddard, Matt Huculak, Greg Newton, and Joseph Takeda. 1-week workshop, Digital Humanities Summer Institute, 2019.How to End your Digital Project.
Janelle Jenstad and Joey Takeda. DH@Guelph Summer Workshops, 2023.Ending and Archiving Your Digital Project.
Janelle Jenstad. DH@Congress Workshop, 2023.