Leza、Sungu和Samba:数字人文与班图早期历史

Q1 Arts and Humanities History in Africa Pub Date : 2021-06-01 DOI:10.1017/hia.2021.13
Catherine Cymone Fourshey, Rhonda M. Gonzales, Christine Saidi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2016年,在为期三年的国家人文基金会(NEH)合作研究基金的支持下,我们开始建立班图人祖根数据库(BARD),该基金旨在研究和撰写殖民前非洲的家庭、代际和性别历史。BARD是一个来自60多种班图语言的与性别和生活阶段实践相关的词根的数字资源库。我们开发它是为了帮助我们分析这个庞大的数据语料库,我们用它来写人类物质和意识形态发明的历史,这些发明涵盖了跨越多个地区的漫长时期。BARD允许有互联网接入的研究人员通过输入至少三个连续的音素来搜索术语。如果音素在BARD保存的64种班图语中的任何一种语言中以该序列存在,则这些单词及其含义将作为结果显示。在本文中,我们讨论了数字人文学科(DH)作为研究工具的实用性和复杂性。我们用三个重建的词根来解释我们的研究方法和研究过程,这些词根与我们对家庭和世代的研究有关。我们研究的三个词根邀请学者们探索如何恢复非洲人民的过去与其散居者之间的深层联系和联系,特别是以超越奴隶贸易和奴役历史的方式。当我们开发开放访问网站非洲社会历史和跨班图母系社区的数据(ASH-DABMC)和我们的数据库BARD时,我们对数据中编码的含义有了更深入的了解,即使我们面临挑战。我们希望我们的经验的讨论将提供一个智力框架,并激励其他人考虑数字项目。
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Leza, Sungu, and Samba: Digital Humanities and Early Bantu History
Abstract In 2016, with the support of a three-year National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Collaborative Research Grant to research and write a precolonial African history of family, generations, and gender, we began building the Bantu Ancestral Roots Database (BARD). BARD is a digital repository of word-roots related to gender and life stage practices from over sixty Bantu languages. We developed it to assist us in our analysis of this large corpus of data that we used to write histories of people’s material and ideological inventions that cover the longue durée across multiple regions. BARD allows researchers with internet access to search for terms by entering at least three consecutive phonemes. If phonemes exist in that sequence in any of the 64 Bantu languages that BARD holds, those words and their meanings appear as results. In this article, we discuss the usefulness and complexities of Digital Humanities (DH) as research tools. We explain our methodology and research process using three reconstructed word-roots pertinent to our research on family and generations. The three word-roots we examine invite scholars to probe how to recover deep connections and linkages between people’s pasts in Africa and its Diasporas, particularly in ways that move beyond histories of the slave trade and enslavement. As we developed our open-access website African Social History and Data Across Bantu Matrilineal Communities (ASH-DABMC) and our database, BARD, we gained greater insight into the meanings encoded in our data even as we faced challenges. We hope the discussion of our experiences will provide an intellectual framework and inspire others considering digital projects.
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来源期刊
History in Africa
History in Africa Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.60
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发文量
15
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