Text: To Mine or Not to Mine?

After working with various text-mining tools, such as Wordle and Voyant, it has become apparent that such tools are not necessarily useful to a class of this nature. Sure, they provide wonderful representations of the more frequently used words and phrases within texts, and could be used from a historical standpoint to draw conclusions in regards to reoccurring theme seen in speeches across time periods, or something of that manner, but I personally think they’re much more useful in an English classroom. To me, history is less about the words and more about the experiences and actions. Seeing which words are used most often really tells us nothing other than the topic of some text, or that the speaker didn’t have access to a decent thesaurus.

That being said, these tools are super interesting, and I had a lot of fun using them to analyze my own work! From a fiction standpoint, they’re very helpful in drawing conclusions about reoccurring themes or motifs, and can shed a lot of light on the meanings behind a work. It’s in the realms of history and science that I find them to be much less useful.

In regards to my final project, I think I’ve finally got it all together! Sure, there are a few things I’m still a tad bit iffy about, and I’d love to further elaborate on them with a wider array of sources and artifacts, but, given the parameters of the project, I’m confident in my final product! Locating the artifacts really wasn’t the hard part, it was putting them in context with one another and creating a coherent and interesting story using such unique pieces of information from all different time periods and perspectives.

I’m really interested to see how things turn out, and what conclusions I’m ultimately able to draw from my work.

The National Zoo!

After last week’s research on a few broader topics, I really feel that I’m drawn to the National Zoo! I’ve always enjoyed going myself, and I’ve never really thought about all the history and development that went into it until now. I’d like to delve further into the development of the zoo concept, and how the decision was made to open one in our nation’s capital, as well as into the zoo’s initial planning and development. I’ve already learned that it was originally on the National Mall! They also didn’t hire their first, full-time veterinarian until 1950. What were the first animals at the zoo? How were they chosen and transported to Washington DC? What was the initial reaction of the people to the creation of the zoo? To look further into this, i plan to draft an array of questions I’d like to see answered, and do my research to find as much history as I can. I’ll search for news articles from the opening, any reviews that may exist, photographs of the original zoo to compare to more modern images, and the legislation which helped to build it. I think researching this topic will be very fulfilling to myself, personally, and will make for an interesting and insightful look into a different part of Washington DC.