New Tools Help Enhance History

This illustration by Winold Reiss appears in "The New Negro: An Interpretation." A team of students at Penn State Behrend has updated the 1925 anthology, using digital tools to showcase the writing in new ways.

This illustration by Winold Reiss appears in "The New Negro: An Interpretation." A team of students at Penn State Behrend has updated the 1925 anthology, using digital tools to showcase the writing in new ways.

Credit: Winold Reiss

Students Add New Digital Features to 1925 Harlem Anthology

Alain Locke’s “The New Negro: An Interpretation,” an anthology of the Harlem Renaissance, was both a time capsule and a crystal ball: The book, published in 1925, included writing by Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Claude McKay, and Countee Cullen. Their voices, buoyed by a bold new sense of Black identity, would expand the literary canon. “

They were part of an artistic renaissance,” said Dr. Elisa Beshero-Bondar, professor of digital humanities, “and they were claiming their space.”

A team of Behrend students, working with a group at Framingham State University in Massachusetts, has developed a new way to read “The New Negro.” Using guidelines established by the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI), including formatting for machine-readable text, the students digitally encoded the anthology’s thirty-seven poems. With color tags, word boxes, and background shading, they created a visual way of modeling the structure and theme of each poem.

“They broke the poems into pieces and applied these visual tags,” Beshero-Bondar said. “Now, when you read the poems, the colors jump out, signaling different aspects of the writing, from rhyme scheme and repetition to the use of metaphor.”

A team at Framingham State determined which words or literary devices would be highlighted. The Behrend students, using TEI, simplified the code, developing an ontology—a digital rule book, essentially—that determined how the tags would be categorized. They also created a website for "The New Negro," making the encoded poems accessible to the public.

Members of the team presented their work at the Keystone Digital Humanities Conference at Johns Hopkins University in June. They will discuss the project at the MEC/TEI conference in Paderborn, Germany, in September.

As they finished encoding the poems, the Behrend team turned to another feature in “The New Negro”: snippets of sheet music that appear between selections of traditional text. By using the Music Encoding Initiative (MEI), an open-source system for machine-readable music, the students converted the sheet music to MP3 files, which can be played on a computer.

“That was sort of a passion project,” said Zachary Dominick, a senior in the Digital Media, Arts, and Technology program. “We had to manually put in a lot of data—every note, and the chords and accents and all that—but to press ‘play,’ and to hear a song from 1914, that was awesome.”

The ability to hear that music, which fueled so much of the Harlem Renaissance, opens a new path through Locke’s anthology.

“It enhances everything else that is in there,” Beshero-Bondar said. “That’s what you live for in the digital humanities—the opportunity to take something static and breathe a new kind of life into it.”