What is the experience of reading? How can we leverage DH-inflected pedagogy to help students situate their own processes of reading, writing, and learning? In such a tendrillate approach to textual analysis, what tools can help students navigate through a cycle of experience and reflection that underscores the materiality of reading experience?
In this session, my hope is that we can explore the intersection of learning, experience, and DH to begin to sketch what a digital environmental humanities pedagogy might look like.
I began building an assignment during DHSI that asks students to use close reading of a passage as an entry to larger analytical and written projects (zipped Prezi available here through the course’s webpage), but it’s just a first stab at a much larger issue–how can DH pedagogical approaches help us to ground student scholarship in first-hand experience with primary materials? Encoding text, annotating sentences, parsing paragraphs for word frequency–all of these are valuable approaches, which, if used carefully, can bring our students to textual analysis as a fundamental building block of humanities scholarship.
Attention to the labour of reading and the experience of the text can only enrich the connections scholars can make by looking at these narrower street views in the context of an ever-evolving map of the world.
I am so there for this! Experiential pedagogy in literary studies is something I’ve been thinking a lot about. See my (very analog!) post here: www.phdeviate.org/2012/02/23/crafts/
I love that your students’ question, “why make writing harder?” was answered by the experience itself! I think by making writing (and reading) “harder,” we can make it richer. Now I wish I’d brought a typewriter or two…or some goose feathers.
Well, I have a watercolor kit! 🙂 #THATCamp #CraftTable?
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