http://www.albany.edu/jmmh/
The Department of History at the State University of New York at
Albany is pleased to present the first issue of The Journal for
MultiMedia History. We are the first peer-reviewed electronic journal
that presents,evaluates, and disseminates multimedia scholarship.
This free online journal can be reached via the SCRAN LINKS pages
This exciting journal offers a new vision for presenting
historical research. Adhering to the highest research standards and
utilizing the most innovative multimedia technologies, The Journal
for MultiMedia History (JMMH) combines audio, visual, and hyperlinked
materials with thoughtful historical analysis. By exploiting the
almost magical potentialof digital code, authors can explore and
present a range of scholarly source materials impossible to
incorporate into traditional texts. The journal also provides
in-depth reviews, including audio and visual clips and links, of
multimedia resources such as CD-ROMs, videos, and Web sites.
The first issue includes exciting pieces by accomplished scholars.
One item centers on a radio interview conducted in 1960 with the
Nation of Islam's Elijah Muhammad, accompanied by an analysis by his
biographer, Claude A. Clegg III. This issue also contains the audio
and text of a lecture by Professor Kathy Peiss that focused on her
new book about American women and the making of the modern consumer
culture. Tom Kriger explores a labor strike in New York that took
place during the Great Depression. He uses a dazzling array of
photographs and oral history interviews. Adrienne Hood and
Jacqueline Spafford make judicious use of hypertext to demonstrate
the promise and perils of integrating Web construction projects, and
Corrine Blake offers a comprehensive hypertext review of Web-based
resources for students and scholars of Islam and Islamic
Civilization.
We are privileged to have a distinguished editorial board that
includes Steven Brier, co-founder of the American Social History
Project (ASHP),City University of New York (CUNY), currently
assistant provost for Technology and Instructional Media at the
Graduate School and University Center, CUNY; Joshua Brown, creative
director of the ASHP and acting director of the ASHP/Center for Media
and Learning, City University of New York; Mark Kornbluh, director of
H-NET, Michigan State University; Carolyn Lougee, chair, Stanford
University History Department; Roy Rosenzweig, head of the Center for
New Media at George Mason University; and Richard Hamm, University at
Albany, State University of New York; and the founding editors,Gerald
Zahavi and Julian Zelizer of the University at Albany. Susan
McCormick, a doctoral student in our department, has offered her
expert guidance throughout this process as the managing editor of the
JMMH.
Please forward this announcement to other Internet discussion
groups and post it on the bulletin boards of your institution. We
hope you enjoy The Journal for MultiMedia History and we look forward
to receiving your commentsand scholarly contributions at
<[log in to unmask]>.
Gerald Zahavi and Julian Zelizer
Founding Editors, the Journal for Multimedia History
http://www.albany.edu/jmmh
Department of History, University at Albany
http://www.albany.edu/history
Phone: (518)442-4488
Fax: (518)442-3477
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
Forwarded by:
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Judith Winters, Assistant Editor, Internet Archaeology
http://intarch.ac.uk
King's Manor, University of York, YO1 7EP, UK
[log in to unmask] | Tel: +44 1904 433955 | Fax: +44 1904 433939
Join our mailbase discussion group - details at
http://www.mailbase.ac.uk/lists/intarch-interest/
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