Everything in this world must adapt to the times,
Everything in this world must adapt to the times, and history is no different. Whether it's sports, politics, whatever, the "new" way will be the "old"way by tomorrow. You can't become complacent. For the field of history this means joining the technological world. We can't fall behind the times and get lost in the shuffle. Call it academic natural selection; only the strong survive. At first, history was a little slow to see the benefits computers and the web could have on preserving our past. Since the late 90's however some great strides have been made and digital archive websites have been popping up everywhere. As the internet becomes more and more available and easier to use this field should explode, allowing our society to literally never forget anything.
Old books and paper documents aren't built to last forever. Courtesy of The Private Library.
In his essay "On the Web: The September 11 Digital Archive," James T. Sparrow chronicles the creation of one of our most important digital archive sites, the 9-11 Digital Archive . Sparrow was one of the leaders in developing this site, and explains what makes and breaks sites like these. In my opinion, he spends way too much time explaining the software, code, etc. of what went into the site. While that's important, this is a history book, so more time should have been spent explaining what the pros and cons of digitizing our history could mean for our future.
This site depends on contributions from the public. People from all around the US can share their memories, photos, home videos, etc. of that fateful day in 2001. As part of the ECHO (Exploring and Collecting History Online) program, the site has employees who sift through all the shared data and items and catalogs them correctly onto the site. The benefit of having the public donate artifacts is that it allows people to have their personal experiences become part of US history. Each item selected for the archive is number and cemented in its place in history. A project like this would be doomed without the cooperation of the public; you wouldn't be able to get even a fraction of the stuff you'd need to make this viable. As of 2006 (reprint date of Public History: Essays from the Field by Gardner and LaPaglia) there is over 140,000 items scanned, uploaded and cataloged on the 9-11 Digital Archive.
9-11 Memorial in NYC. Courtesy of USA Today.
Beams of light into the New York sky representing the Twin Towers. Courtesy of Lumination Network.
A con that Sparrow sees in the transition to digital history, is that it's making your everyday citizen an historian. The transition is killing the need for, as Sparrow puts it, "experts." If people can just browse the web and find primary sources on sites like these, what is the need for actual historians?
I see Sparrows point and think he's giving the public too much credit. People are still going to rely on historians to do the hard research necessary write the books and make the documentaries the public uses to learn their history. It's agreed that history is a dying breed. I believe that sites like the 9-11 Digital Archive can help revive our field. These sites give easy access to sources and artifacts, that before weren't readily available to the public. The part of the public that will use these digital archives are hobbyist just generally interested in the past, high school and college students, and other historians. These sites aren't going to flood the job market with historians. The digital archives just allow us to better preserve our past and makes it easier for a curious public to find a few more answers than before.
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Tarih Notları, Atatürk Dönemi İç Politika Gelişmeleri, II.TBMM Dönemi, Nasturi İsyanı, İsyanlar, Atatürk Dönemi İsyanları,