Robertson, Stephen; White, Graham; White, Shane y Garton, Stephen. Digital Harlem: Everyday Life 1915-1930
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5944/rhd.vol.7.2022.30503Abstract
Desde el 2003 y durante los siguientes siete años Stephen Robertson, Graham White, Shane White y Stephen Garton, todos ellos profesores del Departamento de Historia de la Universidad de Sydney, desarrollaron el proyecto “Black Metropolis: Harlem, 1915-1930” financiado a través del Australian Research Council. Dentro de esta amplia investigación también tuvieron como objetivo implementar “Digital Harlem: Everyday Life 1915-1930”, un proyecto colaborativo de Humanidades Digitales (HD) con el que pretendían realizar un estudio etnográfico de la vida diaria del colectivo afroamericano en el barrio de Harlem en Nueva York durante la década de los veinte. En concreto, se centraban en el análisis de aspectos tan diferenciadores como el estudio del ocio, el deporte, la delincuencia, las relaciones sociales, culturales y religiosas de esta población, y en la visualización e interpretación de los datos que ofrecían las fuentes a través de su inclusión en un mapa histórico e interactivo, utilizando las tecnologías propias de los Sistemas de Información Geográfica (SIG).
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Juan Antonio Simón Sanjurjo

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
RHD provides immediate free access to its content under the principle that making research available to the public for free favors greater global knowledge sharing. RHD does not charge fees to authors for the submission or processing of articles
Users can read, download, distribute, print, search, partially reproduce or link to the texts without requesting prior permission from the editor or the author.
RHD does not charge fees to authors for the processing of works, nor fees for the publication of their articles.
RHD is free from the moment of the publication of each issue and its contents are distributed with Creative Commons license No Commercial 4.0 International , which allows the user free and open access, criteria that meet the definition of open access of the Budapest Declaration in favor of open access. This means that they can be copied, used, disseminated, transmitted and exhibited publicly, provided that the authorship and the original source of their publication are cited (magazine, editorial and URL of the work, not used for commercial purposes, mention the existence and specifications of this license of use.
The authors retain the copyright and guarantee the journal the right to be the first publication of the work. The authors are free to distribute their work published in the magazine in other media, such as an institutional repository or inclusion in a book.