women-of-coal-revisited
This is a text analysis project which utilizes localized oral histories in order to highlight topics, labor trends, and women's history in Appalachian coal mining towns. Original archival sources from the University of Kentucky Nunn Center for Oral History "Appalachia: Women of Coal" Collection & the 1996 Women of Coal primary oral history reader.
Science Score: 44.0%
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✓CITATION.cff file
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✓codemeta.json file
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✓.zenodo.json file
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○Scientific vocabulary similarity
Low similarity (4.7%) to scientific vocabulary
Keywords
Repository
This is a text analysis project which utilizes localized oral histories in order to highlight topics, labor trends, and women's history in Appalachian coal mining towns. Original archival sources from the University of Kentucky Nunn Center for Oral History "Appalachia: Women of Coal" Collection & the 1996 Women of Coal primary oral history reader.
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Metadata Files
README.md
AppalachianOralHistory
This is a text analysis project which utilizes oral histories from the University of Kentucky Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History.
The specific collection referenced here is titled "Appalachia: Women of Coal," which contains original audio files of interviews which were recorded between 1992-1994. In 1996, Women of Coal was published by Randall Norris and Jean-Philippe Cyprus.
In 1996, Randall Norris and Jean-Phillipe Cypres published Women of Coal, utilizing oral history interviews of fifty-five Appalachian women from Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia, and Tennessee. Women of Coal, while a fairly groundbreaking work in the field of Appalachian women’s history, does not present an academic argument from its breadth of interviews– and indeed, this was not the goal. By analyzing the original audio recordings when available and the edited stories of the women whose original interviews are not archived, this project seeks to explore the broader historical context of these women’s stories. By applying computational methods such as topic modeling and word vector analysis as well as painting a broader historical picture for the original interviews one can not only better understand the primary sources represented in Women of Coal but also the ways overarching American society has viewed and impacted regions such as Appalachia. Through digital textual analysis of these interviews and consideration of the historical context of the region, women’s intimate labor in the coalfields becomes apparent. __
Owner
- Name: Hallie Knipp
- Login: Hmknipp
- Kind: user
- Twitter: hallieknipp
- Repositories: 1
- Profile: https://github.com/Hmknipp
Citation (CITATION.cff)
# This CITATION.cff file was generated with cffinit.
# Visit https://bit.ly/cffinit to generate yours today!
cff-version: 1.2.0
title: Women of Coal Revisited
message: >-
If you use this dataset, please cite it using the metadata
from this file.
type: dataset
authors:
- given-names: Hallie
family-names: Knipp
email: hknipp@g.clemson.edu
affiliation: Clemson University
orcid: 'https://orcid.org/0009-0008-2912-2905'