Open Access
Last spring, a special issue of Geschichte und Gesellschaft titled “Digital History” appeared, and now all of its contributions are open access. Its editor, Simone Lässig, is a member of this network, as is one of its contributors, Michael Goebel. There is also a piece co-authored by one of this blog’s editors, Mark Stoneman. Other contributions are relevant to this network’s interests as well.
Contents
- Simone Lässig, “Digital History: Challenges and Opportunities for the Profession”
- Michael Goebel, “Ghostly Helpmate: Digitization and Global History”
- Till Grallert, “Catch Me If You Can! Approaching the Arabic Press of the Late Ottoman Eastern Mediterranean through Digital History”
- Habbo Knoch, “Das KZ als virtuelle Wirklichkeit: Digitale Raumbilder des Holocaust und die Grenzen ihrer Wahrheit”
- Torsten Hiltmann, Jan Keupp, Melanie Althage and Philipp Schneider, “Digital Methods in Practice: The Epistemological Implications of Applying Text Re-Use Analysis to the Bloody Accounts of the Conquest ofJerusalem (1099)”
Forum
- Svenja Goltermann and Philipp Sarasin, “Das Onlinemagazin Geschichte der Gegenwart: Konzept und Bilanz nach fünf Jahren”
- Mark R. Stoneman and Kerstin von der Krone, “Blogging Histories of Knowledge in Washington, D.C.”
- Frédéric Clavert, “History in the Era of Massive Data: Online Social Media as Primary Sources for Historians”