How to Design a Research Project: An Introduction to the Research Process
Blog Posts, Research, TeachingJason Kellyhow to, interdisciplinary, MURI, Prezi, research, research question, research topic, teaching, training, undergraduate
National Trust, English Heritage, and Historic Scotland Sites (v2)
Architecture, Blog Posts, Digital Humanities, ResearchJason Kellyarchitecture, country house, English Heritage, geotagging, GIS, Historic Scotland, historic site, mapping, National Trust
NEH Funding for Research on Gender Studies
Blog Posts, Digital HumanitiesJason Kellygender, gender studies, geography, GIS, grants, higher education, mapping, National Endowment for the Humanities, NEH
The Warburg Institute, Jewish Refugees, and European Scholarly Networks
The Lost Bust of James 'Athenian' Stuart (1767)
A Regency Capriccio: Thomas Hope, Dilettantism, Aesthetics, and Race
Blog Posts, ResearchJason Kellyarchitecture, art, British history, collecting, dilettante, history, portraiture, race, Regency, sculpture, Thomas Hope
NEH Funding for Gender Studies
Can We Measure Historiographical Turns?: Revisiting the Question
What are the Digital Humanities?: A Primer for Students in Museum Studies
Visualization: NEH Digital Humanities Grants since 2001
Flowchart: Turning a Topic into a Research Question | Demonstrating Significance
Flowchart: Turning Your Topic into a Question | Preliminary Literature Review
"Men of Labor, Men of Leisure: Artists in Early 18th-century England" Part 3 of 3
Blog Posts, ResearchJason Kellyart history, artist, C18, eighteenth century, history, labour, leisure, painting, portraiture
“Men of Labor, Men of Leisure: Artists in Early 18th-century England," Part 2
Blog PostsJason Kellyart, art history, C18, collecting, connoisseurship, eighteenth century, James Thornhill, Jonathan Richardson, leisure, Old Masters, patronage, polite learning, William Hogarth
Flowchart: Turning Your Research Topic into a Research Question | Interrogating Your Topic
Flowchart: How to Find a Research Topic
Men of Labor, Men of Leisure: Artists in Early 18th-century England, Part 1
Blog Posts, ResearchJason Kellyartist, arts, C18, Duke of Argyll, Edmund Stone, James Gibbs, John Campbell, labour, leisure, painter, patronage, taste, William Kent
RIP: Bill Pencak, Emeritus Professor of American History at Penn State University
The Civic Function of the Arts & Humanities
Blog Posts, PresentationsJason Kellyarts, Community Capitals Framework, crisis, criticism, higher education, highered, humanities, NEA, NEH, neoliberalism, postsecondary, university
Mies van der Rohe Barcelona Pavilion