Two Things about the MLA conference I want to connect here:
1. Clearly one of the themes that has developed in the MLA post-mortem has been the rise of social media and the influence of technology at the conference. Both The Chronicle and Inside Higher Ed noticed the prominence of Twitter at the convention, or the apparent prominence of Twitter. It seemed that unlike last year where the majority of conversation about/on Twitter and the MLA was confined to to one session, this year, although noticeably less than other conferences, Social Media was clearly playing a role.
What is more, as The Chronicle noticed this seemed to be a part of a larger trend in the Digital Humanities. Ultimately I agree with Mark Sample (@samplereality), who posted an analysis of the MLA Tweets and Matt Kirschenbaum(@mkirschenbaum) who argued via Twitter that this meme/theme was some what overstated. As Matt observed, the MLA has a history of at least being marginally receptive to “technology and literacy” panels even if they have not been placed in the center of the discourse. (Rosemeary Feal deserves mad props for her outreach here. Tweeters aren’t always the most reverent or polite bunch, self included, but I am nothing compared to @mladeconvention.) Given that Matt won the MLA book award for best first book, it is hard to ignore the fact that digital humanities is becoming more prominent and more mainstream, if still marginal. But I also think there is somewhat of an echo chamber effect here. That is, of course those who write online and are engaged with technology are more likely to notice that technology is being talked about. I think if we polled all of the attendees at the MLA a vast majority of them would have no idea that a conversation (at times academic, at times not) was taking place via Twitter. Indeed I would venture to guess that a majority could not really describe to you what Twitter is/was.
2. One of the other “much talked about items” at MLA was Brian Croxall’s (@briancroxall’s) paper, or non paper titled, “The Absent Presence: Today’s Faculty.” I say non-paper because Brian, who is currently on the job market and an adjunct faculty, didn’t attend the MLA, instead he published his paper to his own website. (I am told the paper was also read in absentia.) I won’t recap the whole thing here, you should just go read it. But two things stand out in the article: 1.”After all, I’m not a tenure-track faculty member, and the truth of the matter is that I simply cannot afford to come to this year’s MLA.” 2. “And yes, that means I do qualify for food stamps while working a full-time job as a professor!”
For several reasons Brian’s paper hit a nerve. Indeed The Chronicle picked up the story, a piece which for a few days was listed as the most popular story on The Chronicle’s website. His paper became, arguably, the most talked about paper of the convention.
In part Brian’s story (how the paper became popular, not the content-or at least not yet, more on that in a minute) is in part a story of the rise of social media, and its influence. And this is where I think the real story in the Digital Humanities is, not the rise of the Digital Humanities, but rather the rise or non-rise of social media as a means of knowledge creation and distribution, and the fact that the rise has changed little. Digital Humanities if it is rising is rising as “Humanities 2.0″ allowed in because it is non-threatening.
So if you imagined asking all of the MLA attendees, not just the social media enabled ones, what papers/talks/panels were influential my guess is that Brian’s might not make the list, or if it did it wouldn’t top the list. That is because most of the “chatter” about the paper was taking place online, not in the space of the MLA.
Let’s be honest, at any given session you are lucky if you get over 50 people, assuming the panel at which the paper was read was well attended maybe 100 people actually heard the paper given. But, the real influence of Brian’s paper can’t be measured this way. The real influence should be measured by how many people read his paper, who didn’t attend the MLA. According to Brian, views to his blog jumped 200-300% in the two days following his post; even being conservative one could guess that over 2000 people performed more than a cursory glance at his paper (the numbers here are fuzzy and hard to track but I certainly think this is in the neighborhood). And Brian tells me that in total since the convention he is probably close to 5,000 views. 5000 people, that is half the size of the convention.
And, so if you asked all academics across the US who were following the MLA (reading The Chronicle, following academic websites and blogs) what the most influential story out of MLA was I think Brian’s would have topped the list, easily. Most academics would perform serious acts of defilement to get a readership in the thousands and Brian got it overnight.
Or, not really. . .Brian built that readership over the last three years.
As Amanda French (@amandafrench) argues, what social media affords us is the opportunity to amplify scholarly communication (actually if your read only one thing today on social media and academia today, read this). As she points out in her analysis (interestingly enough Amanda was not at MLA but still tweeting (conversing) about the MLA during the conference) only 3% of the people at MLA were tweeting about it. Compare that to other conferences, even other academic ones, and this looks rather pathetic. Clearly MLAers have a long way to go in coming to terms with social media as a place for scholarly conversation.
But, what made Brian’s paper so influential/successful is that Brian had already spent a great deal of time building network capital. He was one of the first people I followed on Twitter, was one of the panelists at last years MLA-Twitter panel. He teaches with technology. I know several professors borrow/steal his assignments. (I personally looked at his class wiki when designing my own.) Besides having a substantial traditional CV, Brian has a lot of “street cred” in the digital humanities/social networking/academia world. More than a lot of folks, deservedly so. It isn’t that he just “plays” with all this social media, he actually contributes to the community of scholars who are using it, in ways which are recognized as meaningful and important.
In this regard I couldn’t disagree with BitchPhD more (someone with whom I often agree) in her entry into the MLA, social media, Brian’s paper nexus of forces. Bitch claims that, “Professor Croxall is, if I may, a virtual nobody.” Totally not true. Unlike Bitch he is not anonymous, or even pseudo-anonymous, his online identity and “real world identity” are the same. He is far from a virtual nobody. Indeed I would say he is one of the more prominent voices on matters digital and academia. He is clearly a “virtual somebody,” and he has made himself a “virtual somebody” by being an active, productive, important, member of the “virtual academic community.” If he is anything he is a “real nobody,” but a “virtual somebody.” In the digital world network capital is the real “coin of the realm,” and Brian has a good bit of it, which when mustered and amplified through the network capital of others (@kfitz, @dancohen, @amandafrench, @mkgold, @chutry, @academicdave —all of us tweeted about Brian’s piece) brings him more audience members than he could ever really hoped to get in one room at the MLA.
And so Brian isn’t a virtual nobody, he isn’t a “potential somebody” he is a scholar of the the digital humanities, one that ought to be recognized. But here is the disconnect, Brian has a lot of “coin” in the realm of network capital, but this hasn’t yielded any “coin” in the realm of bricks and mortar institutions. If we were really seeing the rise of the digital humanities someone like Brian wouldn’t be without a job, and the fact that he published his paper online wouldn’t be such an oddity, it would be standard practice. Instead Brian’s move seems all “meta- and performative and shit” when in fact it is what scholars should be doing.
And so in the “I refute it thus” model of argumentation I offer up two observations: 1. The fact that Brian’s making public of his paper was an oddity worth noticing means that we are far away from the rise of the digital humanities. 2. The fact that a prominent digital scholar like Brian doesn’t even get one interview at the MLA means more than the economy is bad, that tenure track jobs are not being offered, but rather that Universities are still valuing the wrong stuff. They are looking for “real somebodies” instead of “virtual somebodies.” Something which the digital humanities has the potential of changing (although I remain skeptical).
In the panel at which I presented, an audience member noting the “meme” about the rise of the digital humanities asked if all of this “stuff” about digital humanities just reflected our fascination with gadgets, or how we balance our technology with humanities, how does the digital affect the humanities in a non-gadget way? (I paraphrase but that’s the thrust of the question). After a few of the other panelists answered, I suggested that the question was bad (this is often a rhetorical trope I employ). I said instead of thinking of the word digital as an adjective which modifies the humanities, the humanities 2.0 model, I am more interested in how the digital effects not how we do the humanities, but rather how the digital can fundamentally change what it means to do humanities, how the digital might change the very concept of “the humanities.” I don’t want a digital facelift for the humanities, I want the digital to completely change what it means to be a humanities scholar. When this happens then I’ll start arguing that the digital humanities have arrived. Really I couldn’t care less about text visualizations or neat programs which analyze the occurrences of the word “house” in Emily Dickinson’s poetry. If that is your scholarship fine, but it strikes me that that is just doing the same thing with new tools. Give me the “virtual somebodies” who are engaging in a new type of public intellectualism any day. Better yet, if you are a University and want to remain relevant in the next moment, give these people a job.

Bravo @academicdave: “digital to completely change what it means to be a … scholar” http://tinyurl.com/yllu6ay #highered #edupunk
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
“if you are a University and want to remain relevant in the next moment” read this: http://tinyurl.com/yllu6ay #highered #edupunk
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Now you tell me. RT @larrycebula : The #digitalhumanities are for the tenured.: http://bit.ly/7WNhHk
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Via @chutry: Excellent post by @academicdave on @briancroxall about non-rise of digital humanities. Must read: http://bit.ly/7WNhHk
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
I find myself wondering how much of this conversation is specific to the MLA, and how much it is about wider humanities scholarship.
I say this because my background is in history, which starts with different questions and operates in a different context. For example, studies exploring the current use of digital tools for history would not really BE historical scholarship; rather, they would be scholarship about tools and their usefulness. Put another way, history doesn’t study current dynamics; there may be some historians doing work on internet communication in the 1990s, but that’s as close as you’re going to get, at least it you’re still operating within the parameters of the field.
So for historians, “digital humanities” connotes something different than it does for people studying internet or social networking phenomena. To me, it suggests research and teaching tools, and means of publication, but, honestly, that’s pretty much it. There’s also the question of audience; much the work I do as a historian is pretty obscure, honestly, and I’m not convinced that making the effort to publicize it to a wider general audience is going to make it any more likely that I’d get a job teaching it, in any case.
Put even more bluntly – I do not see an increased digital presence on my part leading to anything like full or steady employment, even if there was support for digital scholarship more generally. I see it as an opportunity to share my ideas, to spread the results of my scholarship… but recompense? The whole entirety of the academic structure is oriented around the idea of scholars disseminating their work for free, with the payment coming in the form of tenure and collegial approval. This “contract” is broken for those of us working as term or part-time employees, and while publishing in extra-academic channels may well provide opportunities for networking or increased visibility, the fact remains that it’s not a lack of scholarship or teaching skills, nor a rejection of new media, that has led to so many of us to work on the fringes and margins. It is a lack of jobs, and the causes for that are far deeper and more widely spread than more established scholars’ hostility to new approaches.
Like many of those of us outside academia properly, I honestly don’t see how publishing my work online for free is any more likely to pay my bills than publishing it in a journal for free. I don’t think it’s because more senior historians are sceptical about blogging research (though many are); I think it’s because there are too few full-time jobs and too many historians. Digital humanities is probably a good thing for scholarship but that doesn’t necessarily translate to improved conditions for scholars.
[twitter] The MLA, @briancroxall, and the non-rise of the Digital Humanities [academhack] http://bit.ly/73tch7
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Over-reliance on adjuncts risks US academia’s relevance, educ. quality, & teaching’s future: http://bit.ly/5ZbPlP, http://bit.ly/7WNhHk.
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
For Ivan812 and my other two peeps http://bit.ly/5XS1Yq h/t profhacker
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Thanks for the post. A few comments: What you call a “rhetorical trope” is not merely rhetoric but seems reflective of a whole system of logic that truly does not privilege the old way of doing things. And I think, in my experience, many people privilege old models without realizing it. What you are talking about/hoping for is not a revision, it is a revolution (as one commenter pointed out). I also think that saying “change can happen slowly and that’s OK” is problematic since communication changes in society are happening faster than they are in the humanities, and I wonder how much longer that can continue to be OK. The issues surrounding this discussion remind me of a year-old talk by Katherine Hayles. At one point, she helpfully positions @tanyaclement’s work on Stein as a bridge between “traditional humanities” and the digital humanities. “How We Think: The Transforming Power of Digital Technologies” – http://hdl.handle.net/1853/27680
Good blog on social media at the MLA conference http://bit.ly/6zTGsl #higher ed #education
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Lauren,
If you haven’t already, you might want to check out the MLA’s wiki on evaluating digital scholarship: http://wiki.mla.org/index.php/Evaluation_Wiki
I found the page on Documenting a New Media Case especially helpful as I consider my own new media endeavors in light of self-evaluation and promotion.
This comment was originally posted on lauren’s library blog
The MLA, @briancroxall, and the non-rise of the Digital Humanities http://ff.im/-dWWhz
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Just read academhack’s post on Brian Croxall’s online paper. Giddyup. http://tinyurl.com/yllu6ay
This comment was originally posted on Twitter
Thanks KG! That is awesome!
This comment was originally posted on lauren’s library blog
As Kid Bitzer says in this thread at Dr. B.’s place, "all the cool kids are moving to twitter and i’m going to be left behind here on the ice floes of blogs." By the time I assume office in 2012, it’ll be like, "blogging? really? do you also have a CB radio?"
This comment was originally posted on virtualpolitik
[ twitter @ ve Dijital Be?eri [ academhack ] non katl? briancroxall MLA ] http://bit.ly/73tch7