From a Crisis Response to Feminist Talking Circles: Reconsidering Collaborative Feedback Practices in the Digital Humanities

By | October 31, 2023

A recently published peer-reviewed journal article, by Jacquelyne Thoni Howard and Rachel Tabor, discusses ways in which Zoom can increase the quality of feedback on digital humanities projects.

Digital humanities (DH) scholars have examined how feminist methodologies promote inclusive practices to value all stages of the development process. DH scholars can learn from feminist educators, however, about how to extend ‘cultures of care’ in DH learning spaces around feedback processes. Centring these feminist tenets, the Technology and Digital Humanities Lab at Newcomb Institute models strategies for how mentors in DH labs and classrooms can use digital tools to adapt during and beyond crises to intentionally build cultures of care and set up supportive spaces for giving and receiving feedback. During the COVID-19 pandemic interns use Zoom to conduct their weekly meetings. While others had a negative connotation with Zoom meetings, we found that the intentional use of the platform’s sharing features created opportunities to unify our community, permitting more discussion across peers when showing their work. Over time we tailored our Zoom use to create a hybrid feminist solidarity circle to meet DH students’ learning needs. We argue through adapting our use of digital tools like Zoom, primarily introduced as a crisis response, we better entrenched our feminist tenets of equitable collaboration by creating a process that encouraged students to seek feedback more openly and on their terms.

The article can be found at: Jacquelyne Thoni Howard and Rachel Tabor, “From a Zoom Crisis Response to Feminist Talking
Circles: Leveraging Digital Tools to Reconsider Collaborative Feedback Practices in the
Digital Humanities
,” for the Digital Humanities in Times of Crisis Special Edition, IJHAC: A
Journal of Digital Humanities, 2023.

Newcomb Institute of Tulane University also featured this collaboration that started in the Technology and Digital Humanities Lab.

Scholars can use Zoom to increase the quality of feedback – a journal article by Tulane professor and alum shows…” by Lillian Foster, Newcomb News, https://newcomb.tulane.edu/content/scholars-can-use-zoom-increase-quality-feedback-journal-article-tulane-professor-and-alum