Daniel J. Cohen and Roy Rosenzweig, Digital History: A Guide to Gathering, Preserving, and Presenting the Past on the Web
Kristen Nawrotzki and Jack Dougherty, Writing History in the Digital Age
Stephen Robertson, The Difference Between Digital History and Digital Humanities
Will Fenton, The New Wave in Digital Humanities, Inside Higher Ed (2017).
Daniel J. Cohen, Michael Frisch, Patrick Gallagher, Steven Mintz, Kirsten Sword, Amy Murrell Taylor, William G. Thomas III, and William J. Turkel, Interchange: The Promise of Digital History, Journal of American History 95 (September 2008).
Matthew K. Gold, ed. Debates in the Digital Humanities
History Podcast, Historians, The Digital History Revolution, and the Quest for Immortality, by Dr. Katherine Bankole-Medina
Introduction to Digital History AHA 2015 Panel
William G. Thomas, Democratizing History (1999) and examine The Valley of the Shadow: Two Communities in the American Civil War
Perspectives in History, Digital History Section
Timothy J. Gilfoyle, The Changing Forms of History, AHA Perspectives (April 2015)
Edward Ayers, History in Hypertext
Richard White, What is Spatial History?, Stanford Spatial History Project
Frederick W. Gibbs, “New Forms of History: Critiquing Data and Its Representations.” The American Historian, 2016.
Michael Friendly, Milestones in the History of Thematic Cartography, Statistical Graphics, and Data Visualization
Vannevar Bush, As We May Think, Atlantic Monthly (July 1945)
Lev Manovich, Database as a Genre of New Media
Chris Anderson, The Long Tail, Wired 12: 10 (October 2004)
Joel Waldfogel, How Digitization Has Created a Golden Age of Music, Movies, Books, and Television, The Journal of Economic Perspectives 31, no. 3 (Summer 2017): 195-214
Andrew Dickson, How Will We Tell the Story of the Coronavirus? The New Yorker
Graham, Milligan, and Weingart, Exploring Big Historical Data: The Historian’s Macroscope
Designing Your First Project, DevDH.org
Miriam Posner, How Did They Make That August 29, 2013 and Talk with slides
Kenneth M. Price, Edition, Project, Database, Archive, Thematic Research Collection: What's In a Name?, DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly (Summer 2009)
Tom Scheinfeldt, Omeka and Its Peers, Found History
William G. Thomas, “Writing a Digital History Journal Article from Scratch: An Account,” Digital History (2007)
Dan Cohen and Tom Scheinfeldt, eds., “Hacking Scholarship” in Hacking the Academy
American Historical Association, “Guidelines for the Evaluation of Digital Scholarship in History.”
Mitchell Whitelaw, “Generous Interfaces for Digital Cultural Collections,” DHQ 9:1 (2015)
Sadie Bergen, “History on the Download: Podcasting the Past,” Perspectives on History (2016)
Evan Faulkenbury, Teaching Public History
Mills Kelly, Teaching History in the Digital Age
Teaching with Digital History, AHA Perspectives on History
NEH Sample Proposals: Toward a Digital Environmental History of the Americas; Participatory Media; Pox and the City; 2020 Advancement Grants
Douglas A. Boyd and Mary Larson, eds. Oral History and Digital Humanities: Voice, Access, and Engagement
Roy Chan: Using oral history to make Asian immigrant experiences visible, Oakland Museum of California (2014)
Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media
Stanford Spatial History Project
Tom Ikeda, Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project and Densho.
Douglas Linder, Lessons Learned from Building the Famous Trials Website, The Jurist (January 2001) and Famous Trials Website
William G. Thomas and Edward Ayers, “The Differences Slavery Made: A Close Analysis of Two American Communities,” American Historical Review (December 2003)
Cameron Blevins, Space, Nation, and the Triumph of Region: A View of the World from Houston, Journal of American History 101 (2014): 122-147 and the online piece
Digital Public Library of America
Liz Sevchenko, Public History for a Post-Truth Era
Lindsay McKenzie, Digital Humanities for Social Good, Inside Higher Ed
Bethany Nowviskie, Digital Humanities at the Grass Roots, Research Libraries UK, YouTube
Harry Klinkhamer, “Where are the citizen historians?”, in Public History Commons (November 2014)
Historians on Twitter: Twitterstorians
Museums, Libraries and 21st Century Skills
Mary W. Elings and Gunter Waibel, “Metadata for all: Descriptive standards and metadata sharing across libraries, archives and museums,” First Monday 12:3 (2007)
Claire Potter, "Who Owns Your Archive?" in part II of Doing recent history on privacy, copyright, video games, institutional review boards, activist scholarship, and history that talks back
Interview with Lawrence Lessig from 22 December 2008 edition of NPR’s Fresh Air