This post will examine how the Early Caribbean Digital Archive, Colored Conventions, and Reviews in Digital Humanities reflect issues discussed in our readings.
Early Caribbean Digital Archive lays out clearly their goals: to make literary works from the Caribbean and other related groups digitally accessible and to provide means to decolonize these works. In Global Debates in the Digital Humanities, there is an emphasis on decentering Western knowledge standards and procedures to value and evaluate DH works from Global South practitioners. There is an acknowledgement that many existing archives are built with colonial practices, but envision digital archives that remap what is perceived as “non-knowledge”. The ECDA values the practice of “remix” which highlights the stories of marginalized people through digital means and gives their narratives equal standing with those of European Colonial authors. Equally important is the intentionality in providing and curating resources for pedagogical means. Growing the DH field and solidifying its legitimacy requires creating entry points for engagement in ways that are tailored to different academic settings.
Through their commitment to open access and offering/developing pedagogical tool, DCDA and Colored Conventions can work to address one of the issues laid out in Digital Black Atlantic. Two of the structural issues detailed in acquiring enough participation from Digital Humanities scholars of color was the lack of access in these communities to STEM scholarship and lack of peer reviews who have a deep understanding of the intersections of the African Diaspora and digital studies. Through their offerings, projects like these might help to cultivate the very peers that can be difficult to garner.
Lack of access to peers to contribute to larger bodies of research from the Global South was also mentioned in Global Debates in the Digital Humanities, as the authors felt they were not successful in acquiring the number of contributions they had hoped from a range of languages, perspectives, and research approaches. In both the projects mentioned in this post and the paper itself, decolonization of knowledge and knowledge standards will be paramount in growing the diversity of DH.
In Bodies of Information: Intersectional Feminism and Digital Humanities, Jacqueline Wernimont and Elizabeth Losh explain that there is a lack of exploration in DH with human-computer interaction, science and technology studies, and media studies. While perusing the projects in Reviews in Digital Humanities, this was salient when searching through field of study or by topic or method. Spending more time with other repositories for DH projects would help me understand this issue more. Starting questions: How does the editorial process impact particular types of submissions? What interventions are already in place to broaden these intersections? How are calls for submitting to DH publications promoted?


