History of the HTA
Things happen historically, not logically. To understand how the HTA
was started, you have to understand my involvement with electronic mail. I got involved in
computer telecomuncations for history because my elder son studied in Marburg, Germany in
1988-1989, and I learned to use electronic mail so that we could communicate on a regular
basis without cost. We used BITNET because that was the e-mail system open to me at
Mississippi State University and to him at Phillips University. I also joined some
discussion lists, including HISTORY@FINHUTC, which had been organized by a student in
Finland, Joni Makivirta (pictured
at left). I didn't know that Joni was a student and I didn't care. I had found a way
to communicate daily with others interested in history. Yes, there was silliness on the
list. I worked around it or tried to get the list back on track when it deviated too much.
The discussions varied. The members
varied in circumstance; some were students; some were historians; and some from other
professions. There was Jim Cocks, computer technician at the University of Louisville,
Skip Knox at Boise State, Haines Brown of Central Connecticut State University, Charles
Dell, at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, Michael McCarthy, an undergraduate at
Marshall University, Christopher Currie of the Institure for Historical Research, and
George Welling of the University of Groningen. There was an underlying current among the professors that the list could
be more than it was. Mark Olsen of the University of Chicago eloquently expressed
that concern. I tried to address some of those concerns in a
May, 1989 message. That elicited specific calls for reform. I thought about ways to make computer telecommunications
more useful, but my commitments to publishing on the Latin American drug trade kept me too
busy. It was Richard Jensen, then of the University of Illinois at Chicago, who made
the difference. He had been trying in the first half of 1989 to get me to organize what we
were calling Clionet. As I said at the time, I was too
busy to take the challenge. Eventually Jensen would create H-NET .
In 1989, I also became concerned by the
inability of historians to move large files by e-mail; or, at least, for some historians
to do so. In response to some discussion on HISTORY@FINHUTC (I don't remember the exact
nature of it), in December, 1989 I had sent a file on French
socialism via e-mail. That caused some stir among some of the participants. I was
criticized severely by some of them. Although I offered what I thought was an effective defense and I had support from
others, the criticism was deserved. Some people had quotas on their accounts and my
mailing burst them. Others were not interested in receiving what I had sent. The solution
was to store the files where a person could get them when desired. So I learned about File
Transfer Protocol. Late in 1990 I wrote an article for Perspectives
of the American Historical Association. When it appeared early in 1991, professional
historians came onto the 'Net in droves. I officially created an FTP site (RA) in
February, 1991. I was able to get some help. I also tried to
get others to do the same thing because I realized that one site could not store
everything . Lynn Nelson
(pictured) volunteered, and was up and running by August, 1991. We began to divide the load. And we were off and running. RA grew by leaps and bounds
as I found new things to store there. Some were sent to me by others. Christopher Currie
of the Victoria County History project of the University of London sent me an article on medieval carpentry[I refer you to his revised version which has photos, something not possible when we first did it.] and Art
Ferrill sent me several articles on ancient military history, for example. I had to
subdivide into directories. By September 1, 1991, the filelist on
RA had grown considerably.
The effort to create other sites began in
1991 but accelerated after Thomas Zielke's important paper on
"History at Your Fingertips" and my own paper on anonymous
FTP sites, both delivered at the Mid-America Conference in September, 1992 (Thomas was
in Germany and I was in Mississippi. We chatted in the background while awaiting our
turns), things progressed rapidly. One remembers Valentine Smith and his Soviet archives
in Kansas City, Mike McCarthy and his Byrd site at Marshall University, George Welling (pictured with guitar) with
Gheta at Groningen in Holland, and others that Lynn mentions below. I spent a lot of time
trying to get people to create FTP and/or gopher sites (I discovered gopher sites in 1991
and the WWW in Jerusalem in early 1992. RA grew as did the other sites, but I couldn't pay
as much attention to history telecommunications as I wanted because I became an associate
dean in August, 1991. I had to devote my energies to saving the University's humanities
programs and a science program in the face of the efforts of a reactionary committee's
efforts to make Mississippi State University into a trade school. Lynn Nelson had to be the pioneer in finding a way to hook
them all together through HNSource.
In retrospect, I was right on target about a
number of issues: that colleges and universities would incorporate computer
telecommuications into their fixed costs; that this would become a prime means of
scholarly communications; and that large files would routinely be moved around. Today,
files are routinely large; e-mail quotas virtually don't exist; and we have distributed
resources as a routine matter. Who would have thought it ten years ago when I began
fiddling with e-mail and trying to protect myself from colleagues who thought I was
wasting my time? Even they use e-mail and the Web!
I've taken the liberty to quote from a
letter that Lynn Nelson wrote about my role in computer telecommunications for historians
and what we had accomplised before the Web.
"He was, of course, the builder and maintainer of RA, and was highly regarded if
only for that accomplishment. RA was the first, and at the time the only, File Transfer
Protocol (FTP) site for historians. His file of instructions on using FTP was widely
distributed both here and abroad, and historians began to learn from it how to utilize the
information that he was collecting there for their use.
Together with Thomas Zielke, of Oldenburg University (Germany), Don organized the
effort by which members of HISTORY@FINHUTC established, in the space of two months, twenty
new discussion lists for historians, each devoted to a specific topic. All twenty are
still in operation, with a total membership well in excess of twenty thousand. He also
encouraged and guided me in the construction of MALIN, a second FTP site for historians,
and we began to work on means of integrating our two sites as a "seamless"
whole.
Meanwhile, with Don's constant interest and involvement, and with the help of the LYNX
development team here at the University of Kansas, I completed the project he and I had
begun, that of developing a means of linking distant sites into effective wholes. Don had
the pride of place and, in March of 1993, demonstrated the facility as the center-piece of
a talk delivered to the members and sraff of the Institute of Historical Research on the
University of London. The facility was HNSOURCE, which, I am told, was the first
information server in the world. The Institute was anxious to construct a similar site, as
was the National University of Australia. By July of that 1993, these sites were
operative, and we set the links that united them, RA and MALIN, into a single network. By
the end of the year, BYRD and GHETA, two new FTP sites, and CLASSICS, another information
server, had joined, and GRENET, a French site was coming on-line. In November of 1992, Don
had suggested that our ultimate goal should be the construction of a world-wide network
connecting all the various electronic facilities of use to historians -- ftp, telnet,
gopher, and others. In the midst of his other responsibilities, he had somehow found the
time to set in motion the development of these new sites. By November of 1993, we had
achieved Don's "ultimate" goal.
I apologize for the length of this discussion of Don's activities in the area of
computer telecommunications, but the World-Wide Web has caught public attention to such a
degree that many people do not realize that there was a good deal of work on the Internet
before the Web existed. As a matter of fact, when CERN and NSCA announced that the Web was
operational, they found that a well developed historian's network already existed and
invited it to join the Web. HNSOURCE became History, the World-Wide Web Virtual Library's
maintainer for the subject History, and spun off a series of specialized sites. The
Australian server became COOMESQUEST, the WWW-VL maintainer for social science and the
center of a massive complex of Australian servers. CLASSICS formed the platform on which
the Perseus project was built, and RA, GHETA, and others became award-winning Web sites.
(As an aside, Don has continued to develop RA in his "spare" time, and it is now
regarded as the primary data base for African and Latin American materials.)
I suppose that someone will eventually write a history of the development of computer
telecommunications as a medium and will be struck by the fact that historians seem to have
led the way in many ways. If he is curious enough to look into the matter, he will
discover the crucial importance of Don's leadership."
In 1998, I began to expand the Historical
Text Archives beyond the Mississippi State University server. The HTA has never been an
official part of the University. It simply gave me personal Web space just as it gives Web
space to students, staff, and other faculty members. The support and supportive comments
came from Computing Center (now Systems and Networks) personnel. The Department of History
was hostile to what I was doing; I have received no support from that
quarter and, as I retire in 2003, I see that only the junior faculty are smart enough to have an inkling of what this means. Academics don't accept change very well. They are frightened of new things.
It makes no difference where the files are stored, of course. In 1998, I moved some
material on Hungarian history to www.fortunecity.com. In 1999, I moved much of the site to
www.geocities.com/djmabry/. By April, 2000, I had moved completely off the Mississippi
State University server onto different servers in the world. This arrangement works
reasonably well. In February, 2001, I had my own domain and server, historicaltextarchive.com, which promises
to be much better for users and for me.
Ironically, as Director of the Institute for the Humanities at Mississippi State University, I was able to arrange
a six-month internship for one of George Welling's graduate students; a side benefit has been that he has been helping me with the HTA. Just in time for my retirement from Mississippi State on June 30, 2003!
Discussions
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 2044; Fri, 19 May 89 19:14:25 CDT
Date: Fri, 19 May 89 09:40:00 EST
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: Martin Ryle
Subject: Re: RE: Death of the list?
To: don mabry
Prof. Mabry's question about whether France could have emerged as a modern state
without herrevolution is provocative. The issue would seem to reside in our definition of
"modern state," which I should think would require a shift from subject to citizen, from landed to
liquid wealth,from realm to nation, and other such changes. That the revolution accompanied these
shifts seems to be beyond dispute, and it is probably helpful to think of the shifts as the
essence of the revolution. The particulars of political conflict, violence, war, and speculation were
the result of the specific reactions of specific persons and groups to the radical changes that
French society was undergoing.
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 2329; Fri, 19 May 89 21:29:38 CDT
Date: Fri, 19 May 89 13:29:49 EDT
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: R3KEZ@AKRONVM
To: don mabry
To: Bill Robie
Like any other discipline, there are those who specialize in a specific area which has
particular interest. In the case of Women's History or Black History I believe that they have been
neglected sufficiently to warrant a seperate study. The rest of the issue hinges, at least in my mind, on whether the isolation of such subjects is voluntary and if not, does the isolation encourage a strong and unnatural bias to
emerge in the research?
There are also some other things which I must consider before saying more - namely, whether the development of a distinct branch of history, such as Publishing History or Railroad History, must naturally produce biases - any ideas?
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 2462; Fri, 19 May 89 21:53:08 CDT
Date: Fri, 19 May 89 14:23:32 EDT
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: R3KEZ@AKRONVM
To: don mabry
Doctor Mabry,
Your regards delivered to Grant, et al, though the department is rather dead during the intersession. I hope to be able to send you some info on Women in printing and publishing within the next few weeks. Most of the data was obtained from primary sources, but there were
a few secondar sources which I will bring up as soon as I can locate my paper. My interest is in Italian Renaissance silversmithing techniques for polishing, deburring, etc.
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 2544; Fri, 19 May 89 22:44:51 CDT
Date: Fri, 19 May 89 16:07:00 EST
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: "ALEC PLOTKIN [OWNER-NOVA LAXHEADS]" <185422285@VUVAXCOM>
Subject: Help
To: don mabry
If anybody knows a good history of baseball could you please send me the name. Thanks
Alec Plotkin Mgr.
1:>Would ALec Plotkin contact me directly regarding his question about
2:>a history of baseball. The userid I received doesn't work.
3:>@eof
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 2714; Sat, 20 May 89 00:48:07 CDT
Date: Thu, 18 May 89 10:43:25 CST
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
Comments: Please Acknowledge Receipt
From: Z4648252
Subject: Texas woman in history
To: don mabry
I'm not actively working in women's history either, but Texas has rich folklore and myths. Trying to pull the truth out is not really that difficult.
For example, the "mother" of Texas is considered to be Janes Long.
The following is the circumstance:
A dentist named Dr. James Long arrived in Texas in 1819 during June.
He and his force of 200 men occupied the present day city of Nacogdoches (where I am typing this!!!) and the Stone Fort, which is a 'tourist trap' today. He declared Texas to be independent from Spain, or more specifically, New Spain (Mexico).
He left the area to pick up supplies and brought his wife, Jane Long and her black servant girl, Kian. This was during the year 1820. They arrived with a large armed force and set up a fort on the coast at Port Bolivar. By this time, New Spain authorities were becoming alarmed, sent a force to La Bahia where Long and his men journeyed (he left Jane and Kian at Bolivar) and captured them. Dr. Long was executed.
Wife Jane and Kian decided to remain at Port Bolivar, surviving on fish and what other seafoods they could obtain, and using a cannon to keep curious Karankawa Indians from coming near them(1). When she learned of Long's fate, Jane Long rode horseback to Mexico in an effort to have her husband's murderers punished(2).
For Texans, Jane Long is considered the Mother of Texas, but to be more exact Kian should be considered the Black Mother of Texas. Kian remained loyal to Jane throughout the duration and declined any offer of freedom. It is unfortunate that Kian is rarely mentioned.
Note that the references come from: All Hail the Mighty State: TEXAS.
by Archie P. McDonald. Pages 47-49.
1: From your note, one must assume that Texas in this context means Texas the independent nation. Otherwise, one would have to look for a
4:>chicana or an Amerind as the "mother."
5:>Isn't the historian's proper viewpoint that there is no "mother" or
6:>"father" in such instances? That parentage is an inappropriate
7:>paradigm?
8:>@eof
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 2743; Sat, 20 May 89 05:26:03 CDT
Date: Thu, 18 May 89 14:09:00 EDT
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: J_CERNY@UNHH
Subject: Following up on Mark Olsen.
To: don mabry
I just want to follow up on Mark Olsen's remarks. While interested in
history, I'm not in any way a historian by training or profession. I
subscribe to HISTORY out of general curiosity and as our BITNET
Inforep to keep up my awareness of things others on campus might want
to know about.
Toward that end, the other day I finally detected enough interest in
BITNET in our History Department that I arranged a custom session to
tell them about BITNET and show hands-onthem how to access it, salting
the examples with some recent items from HISTORY and HUMANIST.
These people all use computers, but they use PCs, not our large
systems. Some use Macintoshes and some DOS PCs So there are several
thresholds (barriers) they encounter before they can really begin to
make BITNET use a regular part of their professional activity.
They have to use a terminal emulator to get to our large system (node
UNHH, named "Hilbert"). They have to learn a little bit about VAX/VMS
MAIL. They do not have to learn a VAX/VMS editor, but the whole
process becomes much, much easier if they can. None of these is a big
deal, but for a historian who is already very busy, they can
cumulatively serve to keep BITNET at arm's length.
I suspect we are representative in this situation, not unique.
Jim Cerny
/\__/
/ |
/ |
James W. Cerny / |
MicroVAX Support Manager and / | D=University of NH,
Newsletter Publisher / | Durham campus.
University Computing / | K=Keene State College
Hamilton Smith Hall / | M=University of NH,
University of New Hampshire / P | Manchester campus.
Durham, NH 03824 | P=Plymouth State College
/ |
(603)-862-3058 / |__
BITNET: J_CERNY@UNHH | K D |
UUCP: ... uunet!unh!jwc M _|
\______________/
Received:
by UA1VM (Mailer
R2.03B) id 2795; Sat, 20 May 89 05:32:37 CDT
Date: Fri, 19 May 89 20:11:00 EST
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: Martin Ryle
Subject: Re: Relevency....(or lack thereof)
To: don mabry
Re Donald Mabry's comments about historians doing ourselves in. Whenever one of my
colleagues calls upon the example of Munich to justify intransigence
toward the Soviet Union, I feel obliged to charge the benighted soul with
incompetence. If history does not teach us to get the facts straight, judge
each circumstance in its own context, and avoid simplistic application of
"lessons" learned from the past, then history teaches nothing worthwhile.
Martin Ryle
Professor of History
University of Richmond, VA
Ryle@urvax.urich.edu
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 3666; Sat, 20 May 89 19:37:36 CDT
Date: Sat, 20 May 89 20:23:21 EST
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: Morris Fried
To: don mabry
In-Reply-To: Message of Wed,
17 May 89 05:16:44 CDT from
Prof. Olsen's comments are accurate and to the point. His message points the way to a
more
appropriate use of this medium; until now, except for one or two others, only Professor
Mabry's
comments and suggestions have been stimulating to a sociologist with a serious interest
in and
commitment to history, and historical thought. A combination of technical advice and
theoretical suggestions would be marvelous. Let's not bury the list yet, please.
And now that I've only just heard about the Humanist list, can someone tell me how to
subscribe
to that?
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 3606; Sat, 20 May 89 17:44:52 CDT
Date: Sat, 20 May 89 18:33:00 EDT
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: "Peter D. Junger"
Subject: Royal progresses
To: don mabry
A colleague of mine would like to find a short description
of English 'Royal progresses.' I believe that he is particularly
interested in the economic consequences of having a medieval court
drop in for dinner.
Thank you.
Peter Junger--CWRU Law School--Cleveland,
OH--JUNGER@CWRU--JUNGER@CWRU.CWRU.EDU
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 3798; Sat, 20 May 89 23:06:17 CDT
Date: Sat, 20 May 89 23:49:43 LCL
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: Karen Vogeley
Subject: Merely a personal interest
To: don mabry
Would anyone be able to recommend a good biography of Margaret,
Countess of Salisbury? She had an interesting life, which was ended
by Henry VIII.
Thanks.
HISTORY@FINHUTC MEMBERS BEFORE 1991
*
* History
*
* Review= Public Subscription= Open Send= Public
* Notify= No Reply-to= List,Respect Files= Yes
* Ack= No FormCheck= No X-Tags= Comment
* Notebook= Yes,G,Separate,Public
* Validate= Store only
* Mail-via= Dist2
* LoopCheck= NoToCount
* Errors-To = Owner
*
* Owner= MAKIVIRT@FINJYU (Joni Makivirta)
*
* The meaning of this list is to discuss about history as a science,
* computers and historians, cultural development, cultural differences,
* and philosophy. HISTORY wants to be a discussion forum for historians
* and bring history closer to other sciences.
*
R3KEZ@AKRONVM Karl E. Ziellenbach
arpalists+HISTORY@ANDREW.CMU.EDU Andrew Message System
A4422DAE@AWIUNI11 KONRAD NEUWIRTH
A7171GAA@AWIUNI11 Thomas Wiltner
Z00WYR01@AWIUNI11 Rudolf WYTEK
NETNEWS@BLEKUL11 netnews usenet
VILSON@BRFAPESP VILSON SARTO
TV9751@BROCK1P TOM VERSO
HISTODST@BROWNVM Brown Local Dist.
DONWEBB@CALSTATE Donald P. Webb
GLTKUHN@CALSTATE Larry Kuhn
PSAAAF5@CALSTATE Jim O'Linger
COM3RAE@CLUSTR.TRENT.AC.UK Simon Rae
3IJEF26@CMUVM CHARLES E. CARLSON.
FECTEAU@CUA Claude G. Fecteau
MCCARTHY@CUAVAXB WILLIAM MCCARTHY
blumberg@CUNIXD.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU roger b. blumberg
JUNGER@CWRU PETER D. JUNGER
WOOLF@DALAC Daniel Woolf
UPG202@DBNRHRZ1 Axel Wupper
GALGAZI@DGOGWDG1 Gadi Algazi
ZHSF@DK0ZA1 "Ralph Ponemereo"
113355@DOLUNI1 Thomas Zielke
170186@DOLUNI1 thorsten mack
HIROBIE@ECUVM1 WILLIAM ROBIE
MAKIVIRT@FINJYU joni makivirta
TOSINE@FINJYU STUDENT MAGAZINE IN JYVASKYLA. SEND STORIE
HIST-MK@FINOU martin kusch
HIS-JK@FINTUVM Jaakko Kankaanp{{
KALLIOKO@FINUHA Matti Kalliokoski
PONTINEN@FINUHA SEPPO PONTINEN
BRINNEL@FRSUN12 Heiner Brinnel
MARK@GIDE.UCHICAGO.EDU MARK OLSEN
LIBRSPE@GWUVM Matthew Gilmore
UW641C@GWUVM Bob Tolchin
CHAYWARD@HAMPVMS CYNTHIA M, HAYWARD @ HAMPSHIRE
COLLEGE
RCDILAA@HDETUD1 Hans van der Laan
RCIVJAN@HDETUD1 Jan Snoek
AIBM002@ICINECA Alex Martelli
C312-004@IRLEARN jim duffy
C312-016@IRLEARN Eddie O'Loughlin.
DOHERTYC@IRLEARN Charles Doherty
HICKC89@IRLEARN Vivien Hick
MORRSC89@IRLEARN Deirdre Morrissey
STCS8013@IRUCCVAX Humphrey Sorensen
STOTTNER@JCUVAX "What? Me Worry?"
STOTTNER@JCVAXA "Joe Stottner"
mbb@JESSICA.STANFORD.EDU Malcolm Brown
ACS_JAME@JMUVAX1 JAMES W. WILSON
FAC_MGAL@JMUVAX1 MICHAEL J. GALGANO
BI8030@JPNKISCI Kentarou Gotou
BI8035@JPNKISCI shite kazu
WINCHELL@KENTVM jan winchell
FKAFKA@KSUVM Gregory T. Davis
MARK@LIUVAX MARK CARTER
STAFFORD@LIUVAX M. STAFFORD
RAS370@MAINE William TeBrake
RPY383@MAINE COLIN MARTINDALE
DJMABRY@MSSTATE don mabry
JAYRICHY@MSSTATE Jay Ritchie
CHADANT@MUN CHADANT@MUN.BITNET T.CHADWICK
MNEWTON@MUN MICHAEL NEWTON
THRA004@MVS.ULCC.AC.UK C.R.J. Currie
UD165202@NDSUVM1 Nathan Irwin
DDAHM@NEUVM1 Hans Joergen Marker
KLA@NIHCU Karen La Paglia
FAFKH@NOBERGEN Knut Hofland
HKLRP@NOBERGEN Richard Holton Pierce
ANGIE@NTIVAX ANGIE YIP
FZINN@OBERLIN GROVER ZINN
HSW100U@ODUVM Dr. Wilson
DAVID@PENNDRLS R. David Murray
JYM@PSUARCH Joe Matyaz
BCJ@PSUVM
WHV@PSUVM Bill Verity
RICH@PUCC Richard Giordano
SHUCHANG@PUCC SHU-MING CHANG
0632281@PUCC Tom Nimick
JOHNFOX@RCN john fox
NRCGSH@RITVAXD NORMAN COOMBS
ACAD8044@RYERSON PATRICIA MOONEY
GBARROS@SETONVM Keith A. Barros
Z4648252@SFAUSTIN Larry Rymal
ASIEVERS@SMITH Ann Sievers
KVOGELEY@SUVM Karen Vogeley
CM5@TAUNIVM shmuel orenbuch
RONEN1@TAUNIVM RONEN SHAPIRA
PA126318@TECMTYVM Alfredo Delgado-Garza
KENAN@TRBOUN Tulug KENANOGLU
OEBL8717@TREARN ibrahim hur
GRFG001@TWNMOE10 robert wu
GM06091@UAFSYSB Gerald Wayne McCollum
LOIS@UCF1VM Lois Buwalda
HISTORY@UCIVMSA "UC Irvine"
FRIED@UCONNVM FRIED@UCONNVM Morris Fried
MAD01014@UFRJ Sergio T. Balaj
CHRIS@UKCC Chris Corman
RHORER@UKCC Marc Rhorer
STEVE@UKCC Steve Thomson
ARKEAR01@ULKYVM Anna Kearney
C225789@UMCVMB nick davis
C476721@UMCVMB bill ball
TBEAUDOIN@UMKCVAX1 Thomas More Beaudoin
GUEDON@UMTLVR JEAN-CLAUDE GUEDON
UJEFF1@UNC JEFF HASMANN
UNELSON@UNC SCOTT NELSON
UNLSON@UNC SCOTT NELSON
JAPENNY@UNCG jim penny
J_CERNY@UNHH Jim Cerny -- Univ. N.H.
ATSDJR@UOFT01 Donna J. Rostetter
ATSPFM@UOFT01 Pat Mercurio
UOG91026@UOGUELPH martin agnew
J_CARROL@UPRENET JOE CARROLL
RYLE@URVAX "martin Ryle"
F0A8@USOUTHAL James B. McSwain
S_RICHMOND@UTOROISE SHELDON RICHMOND
HISTORY@UWPG02 David Bell
CAPTAIN@UWYO MARK OLIVER
A_BODDINGTON@VAX.ACS.OPEN.AC.UK Andy Boddington
LOU@VAX.OXFORD.AC.UK Lou Burnard
ECOMMAG@VAXA.HW.AC.UK Mark Gray
P.Adman@VME.CC.HULL.AC.UK peter adman
E.Mawdsley@VME.GLASGOW.AC.UK Evan Mawdsley
L.M.Richmond@VME.GLASGOW.AC.UK LESLEY RICHMOND
N.J.Morgan@VME.GLASGOW.AC.UK Nicholas Morgan
edt@VTCOSY.CNS.VT.EDU Ed Tuthill
BLNKNSHP@VTVM1 L. A. Blankenship
ERDT@VUVAXCOM "TERRENCE ERDT"
18542228@VUVAXCOM ALEC PLOTKIN
HOFFMAN_E@WABASH "Eric Hoffman"
JKASIOWN@WAYNEST1 Jerry Kasiowniak
SEN%SIMON%WUGATE%WUGATE@WUGATE.WUSTL K. C. Sen
UN023077@WVNVAXA BRUCE MACISAAC
ELINZE@YALEVM Naama Zahavi-Ely
MKELLER@YALEVM michael keller
BRIANW@YORKVM2 "Brian Whittaker"
*
* Total number of "concealed" subscribers: 1
* Total number of users subscribed to the list: 136 (non-"concealed" only)
* Total number of local node users on the list: 0 (non-"concealed" only)
*
Use of History
Received: by UA1VM (Mailer R2.03B) id 6979; Thu, 18 May 89 12:37:06 CDT
Date: Wed, 17 May 89 05:16:44 CDT
Reply-To: History
Sender: History
From: Mark Olsen
To: don mabry
The HISTORY list has produced an amazing amount of garbage
that, speaking buntly, is not only pointless but embarassing
to historians. The numerous attempts to stimulate conversation
by making inflamatory comments about national characteristics or
posing hypothetical and unanswerable questions are certainly not
indicative of the caliber of thought that one typically encounters in historical research. The problem
is that the list was started without focus and without a defined consistuency. A comparison
to the very sucessful HUMANIST list might be helpful.
I was at the meeting where HUMANIST was formed. It was clear that the main focus was computer
applications in the very broadly defined discipline called "humanities". The binding ethic allows
individuals from very diverse backgrounds to communicate sensibly about topics
of importance. Not only are there broad discussions of "purpose"
and opinion, but a VERY important exchange of technical information,
ranging from the availability of data to programming problems. HUMANIST
also boasts an impressive array of individuals willing to share
technical knowledge and provide advice on other research and teaching
matters. What attracts scholars and teachers to HUMANIST is the clear
definition of what is being discussed and the application of the
information exchanged to their work. I have learned -- as a French
revolutionary historian and review editor for _Computers and the
Humanities_ -- a lot from HUMANIST that applies to my work; frequently
this information comes from people whose direct research interests
are very far removed from mine. A clearer defintion of what HISTORY
is would help stimulate useful exchanges.
As an historian, I have been particularly depressed about the failure
of historians to develop networks to exhange information. It is not
that historians are not doing good work with computers. Indeed, looking
at the journals _Social Science History_ or _Journal of Interdisciplinary
History_, or _Historical Methods_ would suggest that historians have
more than "humanists" to talk about regarding computer applications
in history. Part of the problem is institutional in that there is no
one place where computer applications in history can be discussed.
Further, there is no "repository" of machine-readible datasets, with the
exception of Michigan's consortium. Another major problem is the
limitation of "computer applications" in history to SPSS or SAS stats
applications. Database design should be a CENTRAL concern to historians
of all kinds. Full text systems and applications should be of interest
to intellectual historians. The failure of historians to grasp
computers in a fashion that goes beyond statistical methods is suggested by
the fact that there has not been a single instruction level text on _Computers
and History_ since Shorter's in the early 70s. Indeed, the only general
survey is the recent conference proceedings from England, which stressed
the diversity, but not points of contact, of historical research and
teaching. My disappointment, as an historian, is also found in that
there are VERY few working historians on HUMANIST and very few who
are found at more general computing conferences.
I would like to propose that the HISTORY list consider focusing its
discussion more clearly on a limited number of topics. My vote would
be to parallel, in some ways, HUMANIST's concentration on computer
applications in humanities research and teaching. HISTORY could
serve as a clearing house for technical information and advice on a
broad number of issues. If it grows in the same way as HUMANIST, HISTORY
could become a very valuable source for exchange of information concerning
exiting data sets, ongoing research projects, historical software, and
so on. This would not "prohibit" more general discussions, but would
focus the comments and add some needed direction to the list.
Thanks for letting me vent my spleen.
Mark Olsen
ARTFL
University of Chicago
In re History
May 25, 1989
IN RE HISTORY
Our colleagues from Chicago and Princeton not only complained about the nature of some
messages on HISTORY but made some important suggestions about how the list could be
improved. Fundamentally, of course, they raised the issue of the *function* of HISTORY.
I strongly agree that sending flames in the hopes of provoking messages on the list is
inappropriate and counterproductive. Name calling, in whatever form, is almost always
counterproductive, even when it does prompt one to respond to the name caller.
Discussing historical events, however, is something different. Through such discussions
one can gain a different (and perhaps better) understanding of those events. The issue of
revolution is a case in point. The French Revolution is being celebrated with much hoopla
this year but often without pointing out its ramifications. Since almost all of us are
children of the French Revolution, we tend to view it uncritically. That is, we often look
at political events as turning points while ignoring the economic changes taking place.
Changes in the means of production in the 18th century certainly produced social and
political change.
The information provided about Canadian history was very valuable, especially to those
of us who know little Canadian history. That information came as a result of a question on
the French Revolution.
In my opinion, one important function of HISTORY is to enable historians and those
interested in history to have such discussions.
Should HISTORY become another HUMANIST? The latter is an excellent source of
information on a variety of hardware and software issues, although not all of those
discussed are useful to historians. Nevertheless, historians can subscribe to HUMANIST and
learn; there is no real need to duplicate HUMANIST.
What we could use, as Olsen points out, are discussions of computer application
problems of utility to historians. One can hope that Olsen or someone else will help us on
this. Richard Jensen uses HISTORY and could contribute much in this regard.
HISTORY, however, should not be just for quantitative or social science historians.
Three important elements need to be added to HISTORY to give it the broadest possible
utility.
(1) A directory of historians with their e-mail addresses and research fields.
(2) A directory of archivists with their e-mail addresses.
(3) A directory of archival collections accessible via e-mail.