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HW#5: Thoughts and Progress on Voyant

For the group presentations, I’ve been working with the tool Voyant, which does text analysis on one or more documents. Among its tools, it generates a word cloud of most frequent words, generates graphs of word frequency across the corpus, and lets you compare multiple documents. Once you have a text uploaded, you can play around a lot within the Voyant “skin”, opening and closing different tools, or clicking on a particular word to see trends for that word specifically. It’s also possible to generate a link to the skin that can then be shared with others, allowing them to then play around with the data on their own. I think this interactive feature could potentially be really useful, since it lets anyone who is curious take a look at the data and track key words in pursuit of whatever questions they might be interested in.

Just as an example of what using the Voyant tools looks like, this screenshot shows Shakespeare’s works (Voyant’s sample corpus).

Right now I have the word “king” selected, allowing me to see specific information about the word such as where in the corpus the word appears, frequencies of the word over time, and the word in context.

To apply Voyant specifically to runaway slave ads, Daniel and I looked at transcribed documents of runaway slave ads from Mississippi and Arkansas (PDF’s available from Documenting Runaway Slaves Project). I looked at the Arkansas ads, splitting the corpus up in two different ways. First, I split the document up by decade and then a single document of the ads from 1820-1865. (note: to turn off common stop words such as “and” “the”, click the gear icon and choose English for list of stop words) Splitting the ads up by decade could potentially make it easier to track changes over time, although since the original document was already ordered chronologically this is also possible to do with the single document. Another possibility we talked about in class is splitting up runaway ads into individual documents, making it possible to compare specific ads, rather than time clumps.

During class, Daniel and I combined the Arkansas and Mississippi documents to do a side-by-side comparison of the two states. Not surprisingly, “Arkansas” is a distinctive word in the Arkansas documents, but with other words such as “sheriff” or “committed” it could be interesting to dig down deeper and figure out why those differences exist. Are these merely linguistic/word choice differences, or do they indicate a difference in runaway patterns? These are the sorts of questions which Voyant raises, but can also help answer, with tools such as keywords in context.

I was interested in comparing the work we’d already done on Mississippi and Arkansas to some of the Texas ads we’ve collected in the Telegraph and Texas Register. I transcribed Texas ads from 1837 (excluding reprints) and compared that with Mississippi and Arkansas ads from 1837. The sample from Texas is small, so I would be hesitant to draw grand conclusions from this comparison, but it’s a good place to start addressing the questions many of us were interested in about what difference Texas makes (if any) in runaway patterns. Here are the results of all three states for 1837. Looking forward, I’m interested in looking at these results more closely to see if they raise interesting questions regarding Texas. This can help us answer questions about whether or not it’s worthwhile to continue transcribing Texas ads (and if so, how many), and how to split up the data (by year, by individual advertisement?).

The main downside to using Voyant so far is the same issue we ran into with Mallett: the Telegraph and Texas Register advertisements are not available individually in text format. This is not so much a limitation with Voyant itself as it is with the medium of primary source documents we are working with. It does seem at this point that Voyant could be a useful tool, but if we as a class decide to use Voyant for our project in the future, we’ll have to think of ways to get around that obstacle.

Update from Ben

Five weeks into the semester, it is time for an update on my experiment in digital history pedagogy. FWIS 167 – The Rise and Fall of Atlantic Slavery, a writing intensive course, uses tools in the digital humanities to explore the rise and fall of Atlantic slavery. You can access the course website at riseandfallofslavery.wordpress.com.

Each week the students post brief blog entries on the readings and comment on at least two of their peers’ posts. We have had occasional guest posters who also contribute to the discussion and react to student questions. I am very pleased with how the blog posts have enhanced our in-class discussion. The students come to class with at least one clearly thought-out position on the readings, and through the student comments, we are able to pick up on conversations and debates that began online. While many of the posts are not as polished as I would have liked, the students are getting an opportunity to work on their writing (a stated goal of these writing-intensive seminars), they provide great teaching examples for our weekly writing exercises.

For the remainder of assignments, the students have selected their own subtopic under the banner of Atlantic slavery.  The student-selected sub-topics include economics, the Middle Passage, slave resistance, slave life, women and gender, and racial ideology.

The students have also constructing a timeline of major events in their subtopic. Using TimelineJS through VeriteCo, the students plug information into a google spreadsheet and then have it appear in a really lovely timeline. You can access our timeline here.  We have had some technical difficulties with the timeline, but a few techie friends managed to solve our problem with relative ease (just don’t ask me to explain how!).  

Using Tumblr, the students have also begun constructing their own primary source archive on their subtopic.  The students have found documents using a variety of online databases and then have written short summaries describing the content and importance of the document.  You can see the beginnings of their archives here.

Future assignments include a historiography paper on a Wikipedia page, a Prezi on modern slavery, and a final paper using the primary sources the students have found in their archives.  So far, I am pleased with the way the students have enthusiastically taken to these non-traditional assignments, and I’m excited to see how things develop.  I will also be blogging about this experience at the Teaching United States History blog.  Stay tuned for more updates.

Dates for Spring Meetings

Please check out the schedule and mark your calendars for February 15, March 7, and April 11. There will also be an optional workshop from April 5-7.

Videos from Fall Semester

You can revisit the talks by Scott Nesbit and Chad Black by watching videos on YouTube!

Here is Nesbit on Visualizing Emancipation:

And here is Black on his “Quito Jailed” project:

An experiment in digital history pedagogy

This spring I will be teaching a freshman writing-intensive seminar on the rise and fall of Atlantic slavery using digital history tools.  A brief discussion of the course is included below.  I plan to use the Rice masterclass as a workshop for the course and will post updates on the preparation and progress of the course throughout the year.  Stay tuned for a soon-to-come reflection on course activities.

FWIS – The Rise and Fall of Atlantic Slavery

This writing intensive course will use tools in the digital humanities to explore the rise and fall of slavery through a transnational study of the Atlantic World, beginning with the fifteenth century European incursions into Africa and culminating in the nineteenth century abolition movements.  The students will learn to study the past in terms beyond the boundaries of nation-states.  The practice of slavery transformed Africa, Europe, and the Americas.  We live with the aftershocks of this institution today, and students will be encouraged to understand the global present as the legacy of a global past. Interspersed throughout the semester, we will focus on six key writing skills, including mastery of grammar, concision, argument, structure, interpretive synthesis, and, most importantly, rewriting.  Through a series of structured, progressive writing assignments, the students will work with digital technologies to conduct research, improve their writing, and present their work by constructing a collaborative website.