Here is my latest thinky thought:
I've noticed that there is increasing tension between hands on, applied DH work and those who are theorizing DH. I've heard more than one digital humanist complain about "interlopers" who have never participated in a collaborative project, tagged a text, or used a visualization tool. I've heard the reverse as well. Those who only create tools aren't really digital humanists, as they haven't theorized their work within the context of humanities and technology.
I think this is an important issue to discuss, hence my post! I've always thought of my applied work as a laboratory for the theoretical work I'm interested in pursuing. The really fruitful work happens in the intersection of the application/methodology and theory.
Perhaps the increased tension in the field is fear of DH being moved away from a group that has tried to develop new, collaborative models of non-competitive work?
Any thoughts on this are welcome!
Thanks,
Amy Earhart