DIY DH: Tools
Are you thinking of doing your own digital humanities research, or do you want to learn more about it? Here are some tools and sites to help.
- AntConcA freeware corpus analysis toolkit for concordancing and text analysis.
- DrupalDrupal is an open source content management system to support resources like blogs and web sites.
- OmekaOmeka is a free, flexible, and open source web-publishing platform for the display of library, museum, archives, and scholarly collections and exhibitions. Its “five-minute setup” makes launching an online exhibition as easy as launching a blog.
- TAPoRTAPoR is a gateway to free online tools for sophisticated text analysis and retrieval, along with representative texts for experimentation.TAPoR now also hosts tools that used to be available via DiRT.
- VoyantWeb-based text analysis.
DH Resources
- Association for Computers and the HumanitiesA major professional society for the digital humanities. Supports and disseminates research and cultivates a vibrant professional community through conferences, publications, and outreach activities.
- Digital ClassicistAn online community of scholars and students interested in the application of innovative digital methods and technologies to research on the ancient world.
- Digital Humanities QuarterlyAn open-access, peer-reviewed, digital journal covering all aspects of digital media in the humanities.
- Digital MedievalistWeb-based community for medievalists working with digital media.
- NEH Office of Digital HumanitiesOffers grants, features projects, and sponsors workshops.
- RIDE: A Review Journal for Scholarly Digital Editions and ResourcesAn online, open access journal dedicated to "provid[ing] a framework of evaluation for digital scholarly editions and...digital text collections."