Digital History Links
The Ethel and Herman L. Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies
The Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies promotes understanding of the city鈥檚 history and culture, with an emphasis on civil rights. It supports new scholarship on New Orleans and fosters interdisciplinary collaboration and community partnerships that promote public engagement and support the cultural life of the city. Through events programming, public media content, oral histories, and digital humanities projects, the Midlo Center explores and highlights lesser known aspects of the city's past.
The Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media is the developer of Omeka, Zotero, and multiple other tools for digital history. The center also publishes multiple digital history-centric websites and online community sourced archives.
The Luxembourg Center for Contemporary and Digital History supports research and expansion of Digital History and Historiography. They routinely host conferences and seminars dedicated to digital history scholarship, and funding and facilitating digital history research projects. They also host an online bibliography of all of their projects at their website, available to the public.
MATRIX, the Center for Digital Humanities and Social Sciences at Michigan State University, is a center for Digital Humanities and History aimed at educators and researchers. It provides training in computing and technology for education, as well as providing a space for experts in the field to discuss how to use methods of technology use in academia. Additionally, MATRIX maintains multiple online resources and digital library repositories on a vast variety of subjects so they may be accessible digitally to researchers.
A large collection of archival collections compiled by Prof. Peter A. Shulman and available digitially.