After traveling 5,000 miles in 6 days (would not recommend. Especially with a cold/sinus infection), I’m quasi-settled in D.C. for a Library of Congress Junior Fellowship. More on that here.
Many thanks to Jennifer Sterling, Jennifer Guiliano, and Murray Philips for being part of a digital sport history panel at this year’s NASSH convention.
I’ve posted Andrew McGregor’s live-tweeting from my presentation, as well as my slides below. As always, I’m more than happy to continue the discussion via email or Twitter. Or carrier pigeon, if that’s your thing. [And as always, PPT content is covered by a CC license.]
Talking about her entry point into DH & baseball history as full of problematic ideas/methods that focus only on major leagues #NASSH2017
— Andrew McGregor (@admcgregor85) May 28, 2017
Her data has the potential to help us think about labor, migration, space, markets, much more. Minor leagues broadens our views. #NASSH2017
— Andrew McGregor (@admcgregor85) May 28, 2017
She’s hopes her data might help bridge the qualitative & quantitative scholarly work so we can see trends & ask bigger questions #NASSH2017
— Andrew McGregor (@admcgregor85) May 28, 2017
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All the Carto DB links:
- NASSH Conference Demo: http://bit.ly/2qnKR1e
- STL Affiliates: http://bit.ly/2qW4E3O
- 2016 MiLB/MLB partial birthplace: http://bit.ly/2ps64Cf
- 2016 Partial Transactions: http://bit.ly/2qWu9SV
- 2016 Animated transactions (non-functional demo): http://bit.ly/2ph5EDz