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Category: #EWUHist544

Invasion of the pod(cast) people

November 30, 2016
| 3 Comments
| #EWUHist544

I enjoyed the first season of the Serial podcast. It brought in a lot of important topics, from islamophobia to the frailties in our justice system. But a journalist friend of mine clued me in to the idea that Serial is, at heart, a show about journalism: it’s a reporter’s winding, uncertain route through a…

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Posted in #EWUHist544 3 Comments

The fair use mixtape: copyright and electronic media

November 23, 2016
| 2 Comments
| #EWUHist544

Online publishing has pushed though a whole forest of weird snares, and one of the most persistent has been copyright. From Google Books to Napster to academic publishing, the legalities of intellectual property have slowed fast-rushing online initiatives to a crawl. Dan Cohen and Roy Rosenzweig call copyright “an ever-evolving set of principles” that must…

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Posted in #EWUHist544 2 Comments

Visualizing past and present

November 16, 2016
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| #EWUHist544

Laura Bliss’ “The modern beauty of 19th-century data visualizations” demonstrates that our ideas about visualization aren’t new. For all a flashy venn diagram might impress us, most of our methods for putting data into charts are at least a century old. I remember reading Susan Schulten’s book Mapping the Nation last year, and realizing that…

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Story draft: Fruitland company irrigation ditch

November 3, 2016
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(Map pin at Daisy, WA, about 15 miles south of Kettle Falls.) In 1908, Kettle Falls had 99 problems, but a ditch wasn’t one. Part of the landscape that lies under lake Roosevelt today is a series of “benchlands,” flat regions separated by steep drops. The volcanic soil is fertile and the nearby Columbia river…

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No one here and people everywhere: crowdsourcing

November 2, 2016
| 2 Comments
| #EWUHist544

In a 2008 article, John Herbert and Karen Estlund wrote that newspaper digitization was “exploding” 1 As leaders of the Utah Digital Newspapers project, they’re probably the right people to ask. The project was a poster child for digitization and open access for years, snapping up grant funding and positive press. Even if it was…

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Posted in #EWUHist544 2 Comments

Draft: the orchard at ft. spokane

October 27, 2016
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Today, most of Fort Spokane is bare foundations. But in the shade of the ponderosas on the western edge of the site, a few of the orchard’s original apple trees have held their ground for more than a century. The orchard was planted in 1902, in the early days of the boarding school. One of…

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Are we rolling? oral histories and changing times

October 18, 2016
| 4 Comments
| #EWUHist544

Until president Cleveland, presidential papers had been just that: papers. But while studying the primary documents that the president and his closest associates had produced, Allan Nevins came to an important conclusion: the telephone was changing the way even presidents lived and communicated. Nevins wasn’t the first to conduct oral interviews to strengthen the written…

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steal this webpage: online happenings in digital history

October 12, 2016
| 4 Comments
| #EWUHist544

For as fast-moving as the digital humanities is supposed to be, Tim Sherratt’s 2011 article It’s All About the Stuff still seems to perfectly capture the state of its opportunities. New technologies for searching, he says, can “turn archives on their heads” by freeing the content of archives from the rigid hierarchies that finding aids impose on them….

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Tasting the apple: new interpretation at Ft. Spokane

October 7, 2016
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My classmates in #EWUHist544 and I are discussing the content that’s already on SpokaneHistorical.org for the Fort Spokane area. Eryn Baumgart’s blog has a thorough discussion of what’s there, and Adrienne Sadlo makes an important critique of the tone of some of the existing content. Josh Van Veldhuizen found some specific mis-interpretations in a story about officers’ housing, too, and I’m…

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Native American Histories and the “Big Tent”

October 5, 2016
| 6 Comments
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When Stuart Chalfort testified in a 1951 court case about Spokane lands, the tribe’s attorneys said it was “difficult to imagine on what basis defendant fathoms its contention” that Chalfort was an expert. He’d only interviewed two Spokanes, went the testimony, and one of them wasn’t considered an expert on the topic himself. (297) It’s an exchange that…

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Posted in #EWUHist544 6 Comments
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  • Podcast: tourism in the early national parks
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