id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_yhsu6n2x25bvrkxnrys3cll2oq Thomas Padilla Humanities Data in the Library: Integrity, Form, Access 2016.0 .htm text/html 6483 369 49 Commitments to Digital Humanities, Digital History, Digital Art History, and Digital Liberal Arts are on the rise.1, 2, 3, 4, 5 These commitments can be witnessed in federal agency and foundation activity, university and college level curriculum development, evolving positions on tenure and promotion, dedicated journals, and the hiring of faculty and staff geared toward enhancing utilization of and critical reflection on computational methods and tools within and across a wide array of disciplinary spaces.6, 7 Librarians have sought to engage these commitments through development of digital scholarship centers, recombination of services, creation of new positions, and implementation of user studies.8 While these engagements bear value, efforts to reshape library collections in light of demand remain nascent, diffuse, and unevenly distributed. In order to inform community steps toward developing Humanities data collections, the following work advances principles derived from practice that are designed to foster the creation of data that better supports digitally inflected Humanities scholarship and pedagogy. ./cache/work_yhsu6n2x25bvrkxnrys3cll2oq.htm ./txt/work_yhsu6n2x25bvrkxnrys3cll2oq.txt