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Assoc Prof at NC State University: C19th British lit, comparative media studies, critical data literacies. https://go.ncsu.edu/pfyfe
Work pagehttps://chass.ncsu.edu/people/pcfyfe/
Latest pubhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00146-022-01397-z
LocationRaleigh, NC
@mia will do, thanks!
Is anyone here a) physically in the British Library (or plans to be); and/or b) a subscriber to the British Newspaper Archive? Tiny favor to ask.

The Research Society for Victorian Periodicals awarded the Field Development Grant to our project ‘Multimodal AI, Image Analysis, and the Illustrated Periodical Press. ’ 🥳

We will apply state-of-the-art multimodal machine learning to explore the illustrated world(s) of the nineteenth-century press!

Excited to work on this project with @pfyfe , Ben Lee, and Julia Thomas!

More info in the RSVP newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/58ec34fce829/research-society-for-victorian-periodicals-april-newsletter-13851062?e=5666c1d78f

#VictorianPeriodicals #MediaHistory #digitalhumanities

I’m glad to have the last chapter of *Going the Rounds*—that will appear as an online draft, at least—“Editing a Paper,” up on the Manifold Scholar site.

This chapter triangulates between multiple sources—such as the digitized newspapers in the Viral Texts corpora, the LoC’s US newspaper directory, and C19 attempts to document newspaper production, to model some fundamental questions like:

+ how many newspapers even were there in the C19 US?
+ in what ways can we consider digitized collections “representative” of C19 papers?
+ what did “newspaper” even mean over the century—in terms of length, format, frequency, &c?
+ how much of papers was reprinted vs. original?

These questions underlie all the work researchers do with digitized historical newspapers but are hard to answer, given the unevenness of preservation & digitization, & are often bypassed, making it hard to contextualize DH findings

https://manifold.umn.edu/read/editing-a-paper/section/fc0597a3-5fe1-439c-86f8-0e47e8a55208

Manifold @uminnpress

The University of Minnesota Press is known for its boundary breaking editorial program in the humanities and social sciences.

Manifold @uminnpress

This is one of the best articles I’ve encountered in the current AI discourse.

The article reads 21st-century debates over AI art through the lens of the long 19th-century debate about the creative status of photography. The author doesn’t anachronistically conflate the two moments, but draws useful parallels—the piece is a model of how media histories can inform our responses to contemporary media shift.

I also like how the article reframes key aspects of the AI debate, noting how worries expressed as about automation—“will AI take over X job?”—are perhaps proxies for anxiety over lost worker protections.

“An understanding of the technology as one that separates human from machine into distinct categories leaves little room for the messier ways we often fit together with our tools.”

https://www.noemamag.com/what-is-ai-doing-to-art/

What Is AI Doing To Art? | NOEMA

AI-generated artwork is prompting hard questions about human creativity. The history of the photograph shows why the terms of the debate are wrong.

NOEMA
Wonder how many graduation speeches this year will be AI generated. Or, instead of using the Oxford English Dictionary to define honor or success or whatever, will invoke ChatGPT in their opening gambits.
Hi everyone! Decided to finally take the Mastodon leap and am shutting down my Twitter. For those who do not know me: I'm in eighteenth-century studies with approaches from book history, women's lit, and digital humanities and I dabble quite a bit in studies in sexuality, empire, and colonialism.

"cats--a tribe he usually routed with shouts of execration"

Having long been skeptical of Henry James, this fact--he hated cats?!--might just end him for me. (From Theodora Bosanquet, Henry James at Work, 1924)

It's a big day for @LivingWithMachines - the book I wrote with Ruth Ahnert, Emma Griffin and Giorgia Tolfo launches today! https://www.cambridge.org/core/elements/collaborative-historical-research-in-the-age-of-big-data/839C422CCAA6C1699DE8D353B3A1960D

And we've released 50 newspaper titles on the The British Library research repository. Post by Giorgia here: https://livingwithmachines.ac.uk/over-half-of-a-million-pages-of-historical-newspapers-now-openly-available/

Collaborative Historical Research in the Age of Big Data

Cambridge Core - Global History - Collaborative Historical Research in the Age of Big Data

Cambridge Core
@danicasavonick good luck with it! Annette Vee retweeted that as a call to English profs, though the thread shows how language gets subsumed as prompt engineering to make more efficient