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Jose Romero wrote a new blog post Zoom University in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
Over the course for the 21st century, technology has been at the forefront of our work, our advancements, and our newer inventions. Whether it is a new phone to maintain communication with one another or a new […]
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Kira Baran wrote a new blog post Exploring How Diction Informs Perspective in Thoreau’s Walden in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
The COVID-19 pandemic, and our transition to remote learning because of it, caught us all by surprise. No one was prepared to make such drastic lifestyle changes in how we live, work, and learn. And yet, even […]
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Olivia Davis wrote a new blog post The Deadly Duo: Social Media and Online Classes in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
It’s no secret that the unexpected switch to online learning has thrown a curve ball into the lives of students across the world. To some, more disciplined students, this may have been an easy adjustment that […]
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Anne Baranello wrote a new blog post Some Observations About Animosity During These COVID Times in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
It’s no secret that times have changed. If anything, it’s the only thing people seem to be willing to talk about. Oh, the world has shut down this, we can’t go outside that. It seems that so many people have […]
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Anne Baranello commented on the post, The Evolution of Thoreau’s Language in Walden, on the groupblog
Digital Humanities at Geneseo 3 years ago
go group 2!!!!! we did it!!!!!!!
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Sandy Brahaspat wrote a new blog post The Evolution of Thoreau’s Language in Walden in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
In our group’s observations of Henry David Thoreau’s manuscripts, we noticed that his use of language developed over time as conveyed through his revisions, specifically those from Versions A to Versions D (18 […]
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Claire Rogers edited the blog post The Wisdom of Simple Lives in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
In “Visitors,” Henry David Thoreau very much mixes praise and critique of the nebulous concept of ‘society.’ Throughout Walden, thorough celebrates his own efforts to live simply and deliberately on Walden Pond, […]
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Jose Romero wrote a new blog post Authors of our Own Lives & Writers of our Fate in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
At the start of the semester, I selected this course due to the nature of what we would be learning about: technology. As someone who is really passionate about always using online platforms to communicate, plan […]
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Jaffre Aether edited the blog post Revising Nature into Language: An Analysis of Solitude through Time in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
Group Members: Hannah Fahy, Hannah Jewell, Kyle Regan, Leila Sassouni, Jaffre Aether
The first major decision of our group was to determine the pages we wanted to review. For that, we chose the first […]
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Mitchell Pace wrote a new blog post Constantly Adapting in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
In the final days of this semester, I can’t help but look back at how things have changed in how we proceeded. With COVID-19, everyone, not just students, had to adapt to how the world had changed. For many of […]
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Maeve Morley wrote a new blog post Sharing our Journey & Perspective on the Final Project in the Midst of a Global Pandemic (Group 4) in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
The month of March brought along many challenges for students all over the world due to the unprecedented pandemic. The shift to online learning has been a difficult one for many, but communication between […]
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Danielle Crowley wrote a new blog post Revisions in “Higher Laws,” a Section of Henry David Thoreau’s Walden in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
Group 5 – Alyssa Harrington, Danielle Crowley, Madison Jackson, Mitchell Pace, and Noah Lieberman
For our revision timeline, we selected the “Higher Laws” chapter of Walden. This chapter, containing much of […]
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Hannah Jewell wrote a new blog post Walden in Real Life in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
Picture this: You’re a college student going into your second semester of sophomore year. You’ve registered for a few different 300-level English classes, all fulfilling different requirements. You’re excited to […]
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Abigail Henry edited the blog post Google’s Newest Employee? in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
As I was scrolling on the app TikTok, for what may or may not have been the third time today, a particular video caught my attention. The opening line of the video was,
This is how you get a job at Google, […]
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Danielle Crowley wrote a new blog post Working Collaboratively, Apart in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
I’ll be the first to admit that I wasn’t quite sure how working on a group project without being able to meet with your group in person was going to work. However, I was presently surprised with how well everyone […]
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Kira Baran wrote a new blog post “Social” versus “Physical” Distancing in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
While stuck at home during the COVID-19 pandemic, I’ve come across multiple news articles claiming that calls for “social distancing” have been sending the wrong message to people. They claim “physical […]
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Anne Baranello wrote a new blog post TikTok And It’s Clapbacks To Misogyny in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
By Anne Baranello
If you’re anyone who’s anyone, you’ve heard of TikTok – the social media app that consists of videos ranging from 15 seconds to a minute, using a rotation of sounds to go along with the video […]
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Mariah Branch wrote a new blog post Writing is NOT Set in Stone in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
As a result of ENGL 340 (as well as a course I have taken previously, ENGL 425: Recovering Marginalized Texts), I have realized that writing is a work in progress. As a writer myself, I am overly critical of […]
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Mariah Branch wrote a new blog post The Relationship Between Language and Computing in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
In chapter 3 of The Information, Gleick discusses how during the 16th century, people had not come to a consensus on the spellings of words. He uses the example of a 1591 pamphlet where “the word cony (rabbit) […]
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Maeve Morley wrote a new blog post My New Inspiration with the Help of a TEI File in ENGL 340 in the group
Digital Humanities: 3 years ago
I was excited, yet very nervous when I signed up to take this course; mainly because computer technology was not one of my strengths. Yet, the sound advice from American author Neal Donald Walsch resonated with […]
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