I’m working on a project to bring more scholars on Asia into social media and public discourse with the Association of Asian Studies. I’d like to start a discussion about what it takes for historians, anthropologists, political scientists — all kinds of scholars, really — to begin writing and communicating for mass consumption. I’m looking for ideas, good examples of what works and what doesn’t, and a deeper discussion about the role of scholars’ work in how the broader public thinks about the world.
A bit about me — I’m a journalist who keeps one foot in academia and one in mass media. I’ve co-edited a book about everyday lives in China with stories by journalists and scholars, and edited an online magazine published at UCLA that also helped get scholars writing for broader audiences. This is my first time at THATCamp and I’m really looking forward to the weekend.
(You can read more about the project, called Asia Beat, in a short proposal we wrote for the Knight News Challenge and more about me on my website.)
Hi @angshah (Angilee?):
I am very interested in talking with you about your Asia-related public scholars proposal. By way of background, I am working on a digital project involving an eleventh century Japanese text (Buddhist didactic tales) that will include text encoding and GIS elements, amongst others. Though there are some in Asia-related disciplines that are interested in digital humanities — and we can compare notes on what currently exists out there and who is or might be interested in this — my very strong sense is that digital humanities, at least in North American colleges and universities, is mostly focused on American and European data sets. I’d very much like this to change. So, I’ll leave it at that for now and will certainly attend your session if it flies. I am, by the way, also interested in contemporary East Asia.
Best,
Bill
Bill, I’d love to chat. Let’s connect tomorrow? (Yes, Angilee)