Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵Digital Scholarship

The growing field of digital scholarship integrates digital tools and methods with traditional scholarly inquiry and research. At Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ College, faculty in several fields of study are exploring what this means to their work. The following projects, collaborative endeavors of faculty, students, and librarians, illustrate a range of possibilities in a liberal arts context.

If you have work you would like to add to this page, please contact kristen.welzenbach@goucher.edu.

 

Digital Library Header

The Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵Digital Library showcases the digitized historical materials from the Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵Special Collections & Archives, and student experiences abroad through essays and photographs.


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As part of a National Endowment for the Humanities grant, Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵created the Collaborative Humanities Laboratory to engage students in telling the stories of objects and to share these stories with the broader community. This is the virtual storytelling space where students across disciplines gather, curate, produce, and present original scholarship centered on artifacts.


eScholarship@Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵

Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ College's institutional repository based on open access that enables Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ College Library to collect and preserve Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ College's scholarly output.


EMMA Notecard

A website featuring Jane Austen's rare 1816 Philadelphia Emma digitized in its entirety. By digitizing Emma in its entirety and providing historical context, users will be able to better understand the book and its history. This 1816 Philadelphia Emma is only one of six in existence and was the only Austen novel to appear in an American edition during her lifetime (1775-1817).


Leo Bretholz

Dr. Uta Larkey, Associate Professor of Modern Languages, taught a class from 2003 to 2013 titled, Oral Histories of Holocaust Survivors. The class was a community-based learning experience in which students interviewed Holocaust Survivors and then retold the survivors' stories. This website is the product of the students' work. The survivors represented here have given permission for their stories to be told. While the filming and sound are not professionally done, the connection between the students and the survivors is genuine and unmatched. Many of these survivors have been interviewed throughout their lives, but not by people two generations apart and in the comfort of their own homes.


Epsom Artifact

The Epsom Project at Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵is a collaborative research project between the Special Collections and Archives and the Historic Preservation Program. This is an active and ongoing research project where students are conducting the majority of the research. In 2012, an investigation began on the history of the land  upon which Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵is now located. The project involves in-depth research using the manuscripts, artifacts, and archaeological remains associated with the 600-acres once owned by members of both the Ridgely and Chew families from the late eighteenth until the early twentieth centuries.


The Menckens

"My home is and always will be in Baltimore," wrote H.L. Mencken in 1922. The following year he would meet Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵Professor of English Sara Haardt, and the two would fall in love and marry in Baltimore. They would spend 12 years together, in the city Mencken wrote had "superior charm," until Sara's untimely death in 1935. Through photographs and the letters of Sara and Henry, as Sara called him, this digital exhibit illuminates the relationship between these two writers and the Baltimore they loved.


Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ Cornerstone

Building a Greater Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵: The History of the Buildings on Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵'s Towson Campus

Over the years Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ has been honored with many awards for the overall outstanding design of the campus. In 2007, the College received national recognition for its efforts when the Towson campus was placed on the National Register of Historical Places. This exhibit by Scott Davis, class of 2010 and the first recipient of the Sally Gilger Barnes '46 Archival Internship, was developed using many of the resources in the Special Collections and Archives Department as well as input from other members of the Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ Community.


John Franklin Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ Papers

This collection contains the John Franklin Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ papers from the Baltimore-Washington Conference Archives at Lovely Lane United Methodist Church and Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ College. Among the items included are diaries, correspondence, photographs, writings and publications. For a listing of the materials at Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ College, please refer to the .  Dr. Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵ donated land for the creation of the Woman's College of Baltimore City, founded in 1885, which was subsequently named after him. He served as president of Ë®¹ûÅÉAV½â˵from 1891-1908 and continued on as a board member until his death in 1922.