Project HBW Blog

Black Studies and Digital Humanities: A Growing List of Online Resources


Kenton Rambsy (HBW Staff Member)
Goyland Williams (HBW Staff Member)

[Compiled by Kenton Rambsy & Goyland Williams]

 

"A black Toshiba Satellite L300 laptop"I am interested in online mediums, blogs in particular, can be used as a space to think through ideas when preparing larger publications, getting immediate feedback, and simply giving larger audiences access to new ideas and information.  In terms of bridging the gap between “Digital Humanities” and “Black Studies,” developing an online presence is crucial. Online websites concerning black culture serve as points of entry for how wider audiences engage in scholarship about African American life and history.

Below, this list constitutes the growing “digital resources” by professors, public figures, collective groups, and institutions that can be used to discuss and study issues in Black Studies. Ranging from the personal blog of Professor Adam Banks and rhetorical matters to digital archives of HistoryMakers, the innovative means by which social networking and online mediums are used to create and shape conversations about black culture is noteworthy.

Related:

Mixtapes, Digital Humanities, and Black Studies

What Literary Scholars Can Learn from Rap Genius

Access Stunts Digital Studies in Black Literature




Individual Scholars/Public Figures Blogs


Talking Book Blog—Prof. Adam Banks

Rhetoric, Race, andReligion—Prof. Andre Johnson

Black Gotham Archives—Prof. Carla Peterson

SIUE Black Studies—Prof. Howard Rambsy II

Imani Perry—Prof. Imani Perry

Diaspora Hypertext—Prof.Jessica Marie Johnson

BLAC (K) ADEMIC—Prof.Kortney Ryan Ziegler

Thoughts of a GhettoIntellectual—Prof. Kwame Zulu Shabazz

Uptown Notes—Prof. L’HeureuxLewis-McCoy

New Black Man (In Exile)—Prof. Mark Anthony Neal

Something Within—Prof.Renita Weems

The Atlantic—Ta-NehisiCoates

 

Collective Group Blogs

 

The Black Bottom

The LiberatorMagazine

Racialicious

 

Institutional Digital Archives

 

The Digital Schomburg

History Makers
Seattle Civil Rights & Labor History Project
The Faces of Science: African Americans in Science
The Underground Railroad- The Journey 
Freedom’s Journal- African American Newspapers and Periodicals
HBCU Library Alliance Digital Collection
Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC)
The African American Mosaic 
Freedmen and Southern Society Project 
The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database: Voyages
Voices of Civil Rights
California Underground Railroad: Sacramento State University Library
The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Paper’s Project, UCLA African Studies Center
The Martin Luther King Jr. Research and Education Institute
African American Women Writers of the 19th Century: Digital Schomburg
Harlem History: Columbia University
An African American Jim Crow South: Charlottesville, VA
Seattle Civil Rights & Labor History Project

Tags: Digital Humanities, lists

Black Studies and Digital Humanities: A Growing List of Online Resources