├── .gitignore
├── Makefile
├── vc.sh
├── vc.tex
├── template_for_resume_cv.tex
├── vc-git.awk
├── template_for_short_CV.tex
├── template_for_long_CV.tex
├── README.md
├── biblatex-chicago.sty
├── jk-vita.sty
├── curriculum_vitae.yaml
└── LICENSE
/.gitignore:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | CV.aux
2 | CV.bcf
3 | CV.log
4 | CV.out
5 | CV.run.xml
6 | CV.pdf
7 | CV.tex
8 | CV.bbl
9 | CV.blg
10 | CV.html
11 | texput.log
12 | yaml_CV.rel
13 | yaml_CV.md
14 | yaml_CV.md
15 | long_*
16 | short_CV*
17 | vc.tex
18 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/Makefile:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 |
2 | all: vc.tex validate_yaml long_CV.pdf short_CV.pdf resume_CV.pdf
3 |
4 | SchmidtCV.pdf:
5 | cp long_CV.pdf $@
6 |
7 | validate_yaml:
8 | @python3 -c 'import yaml,sys;yaml.safe_load(sys.stdin)' < curriculum_vitae.yaml
9 |
10 | %_CV.pdf: curriculum_vitae.yaml vc.tex
11 | echo "" | pandoc -f markdown --template template_for_$*_CV.tex --metadata-file curriculum_vitae.yaml --pdf-engine xelatex -o $@
12 |
13 | vc.tex: curriculum_vitae.yaml
14 | sh vc.sh
15 |
16 | hrm:
17 | # Years should have en-dashes, which damned if I'm going to do it
18 | # on my own.
19 | perl -pi -e 'if ($$_=~/cite\{/) {s/\\_/_/g}; s/(\d{4})-([Pp]resent|\d{4})/$$1--$$2/g' $@;
20 |
21 | clean:
22 | -rm -f *CV.aux *CV.bcf *CV.log *CV.out *CV.run.xml *CV.pdf short_CV.tex long_CV.tex *CV.bbl *CV.blg *yaml_CV.md
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/vc.sh:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | #!/bin/sh
2 | # This is file 'vc' from the vc bundle for TeX.
3 | # The original file can be found at CTAN:support/vc.
4 | # This file is Public Domain.
5 |
6 | # Parse command line options.
7 | full=0
8 | mod=0
9 | while [ -n "$(echo $1 | grep '-')" ]; do
10 | case $1 in
11 | -f ) full=1 ;;
12 | -m ) mod=1 ;;
13 | * ) echo 'usage: vc [-f] [-m]'
14 | exit 1
15 | esac
16 | shift
17 | done
18 | # English locale.
19 | LC_ALL=C
20 | git --no-pager log -1 HEAD --pretty=format:"Hash: %H%nAbr. Hash: %h%nParent Hashes: %P%nAbr. Parent Hashes: %p%nAuthor Name: %an%nAuthor Email: %ae%nAuthor Date: %ai%nCommitter Name: %cn%nCommitter Email: %ce%nCommitter Date: %ci%n" | awk -v script=log -v full=$full -f vc-git.awk > vc.tex
21 | if [ "$mod" = 1 ]
22 | then
23 | git status | awk -v script=status -f vc-git.awk >> vc.tex
24 | fi
25 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/vc.tex:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | %%% This file has been generated by the vc bundle for TeX.
2 | %%% Do not edit this file!
3 | %%%
4 | %%% Define Git specific macros.
5 | \gdef\GITHash{f11b8157273e5e5ab0b04f20b6b65d6c4f9faa4b}%
6 | \gdef\GITAbrHash{f11b815}%
7 | \gdef\GITParentHashes{84c881d993cdee3c4a2cd6b320541daecc04bf68}%
8 | \gdef\GITAbrParentHashes{84c881d}%
9 | \gdef\GITAuthorName{Ben Schmidt}%
10 | \gdef\GITAuthorEmail{bmschmidt@gmail.com}%
11 | \gdef\GITAuthorDate{2022-06-30 11:14:49 -0400}%
12 | \gdef\GITCommitterName{Ben Schmidt}%
13 | \gdef\GITCommitterEmail{bmschmidt@gmail.com}%
14 | \gdef\GITCommitterDate{2022-06-30 11:14:49 -0400}%
15 | %%% Define generic version control macros.
16 | \gdef\VCRevision{\GITAbrHash}%
17 | \gdef\VCAuthor{\GITAuthorName}%
18 | \gdef\VCDateRAW{2022-06-30}%
19 | \gdef\VCDateISO{2022-06-30}%
20 | \gdef\VCDateTEX{2022/06/30}%
21 | \gdef\VCTime{11:14:49 -0400}%
22 | \gdef\VCModifiedText{\textcolor{red}{with local modifications!}}%
23 | %%% Assume clean working copy.
24 | \gdef\VCModified{0}%
25 | \gdef\VCRevisionMod{\VCRevision}%
26 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/template_for_resume_cv.tex:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | \documentclass[11pt, letter]{article}
2 |
3 | % This is a tex file to make Ben Schmidt's CV.
4 | % The content is
5 |
6 | \usepackage{jk-vita}
7 | \usepackage[notes,natbib,isbn=false,backend=biber,url=false,numbermonth=true]{biblatex-chicago}
8 |
9 |
10 | %\usepackage{biblatex}
11 |
12 | % Your biblatex file is likely somewhere else.
13 | $if(bibliography)$
14 | \addbibresource{$bibliography$}
15 | $endif$
16 |
17 | \title{$title$}
18 | \name{$name$}
19 | % I guess postnoms is like junior? I dunno.
20 | \postnoms{}
21 | \address{
22 | $for(address)$
23 | $address$\\
24 | $endfor$
25 | }
26 | \www{$www$}
27 | \email{$email$}
28 | \tel{$tel$}
29 | \twitter{$twitter$}
30 | \subject{}
31 |
32 |
33 | \begin{document}
34 |
35 | \maketitle
36 |
37 | \section{experience}
38 |
39 | $for(appointment)$
40 | \subsection{$appointment.place$}
41 | $for(appointment.items)$
42 | \textbf{$appointment.items.item$}. \emph{$appointment.items.date$}. $appointment.items.description$ \\
43 |
44 | $endfor$
45 | $endfor$
46 |
47 | \section{education}
48 | % Education uses a different field called ``items.''
49 | $for(education)$
50 | $education.place$, $education.item$, $education.date$. \\
51 | $endfor$
52 |
53 | % A little wonky. I want my publications divided up based on tags.
54 | % (Yes, it would be better to just do this with bib file). That's for later.
55 |
56 | \section{selected publications}
57 |
58 | $for(publication)$
59 | $if(publication.federal)$
60 | $if(publication.citekey)$
61 | \cite{$publication.citekey$}.\\[.1cm]
62 | $else$
63 | $if(publication.author)$$publication.author$,$endif$
64 | ``$publication.title$.'' $if(publication.journal)$\textit{$publication.journal$}$if(publication.journal_info)$, $publication.journal_info$$endif$.$endif$ $publication.date$$if(publication.description)$. $publication.description$$endif$.\\[.15cm]
65 | % End of block for academic publications
66 | $endif$
67 | $endif$
68 | $endfor$
69 |
70 | \section{selected grants}
71 |
72 | $for(grants)$
73 | $if(grants.federal)$
74 | $grants.description$\\[.1cm]
75 | $endif$
76 | $endfor$
77 |
78 | \section{service}
79 | $for(service)$
80 | %\subsection{$service.type$}
81 | $for(service.gigs)$
82 | $if(service.gigs.twopage)$
83 | $service.gigs.item$. $service.gigs.date$.\\[.15cm]
84 | $endif$
85 | $endfor$
86 | $endfor$
87 |
88 | \section{software}
89 |
90 | $for(software)$
91 | ``$software.program$.'' ($software.language$) $software.description$\\[.1cm]
92 | $endfor$
93 |
94 | \end{document}
95 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/vc-git.awk:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | # This is file 'vc-git.awk' from the vc bundle for TeX.
2 | # The original file can be found at CTAN:support/vc.
3 | # This file is Public Domain.
4 | BEGIN {
5 |
6 | ### Process output of "git status".
7 | if (script=="status") {
8 | modified = 0
9 | }
10 |
11 | }
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 | ### Process output of "git log".
16 | script=="log" && /^Hash:/ { Hash = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
17 | script=="log" && /^Abr. Hash:/ { AbrHash = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
18 | script=="log" && /^Parent Hashes:/ { ParentHashes = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
19 | script=="log" && /^Abr. Parent Hashes:/ { AbrParentHashes = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
20 | script=="log" && /^Author Name:/ { AuthorName = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
21 | script=="log" && /^Author Email:/ { AuthorEmail = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
22 | script=="log" && /^Author Date:/ { AuthorDate = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
23 | script=="log" && /^Committer Name:/ { CommitterName = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
24 | script=="log" && /^Committer Email:/ { CommitterEmail = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
25 | script=="log" && /^Committer Date:/ { CommitterDate = substr($0, 2+match($0, ":")) }
26 |
27 | ### Process output of "git status".
28 | ### Changed index?
29 | script=="status" && /^# Changes to be committed:/ { modified = 1 }
30 | ### Unstaged modifications?
31 | script=="status" && /^# Changed but not updated:/ { modified = 2 }
32 |
33 |
34 |
35 | END {
36 |
37 | ### Process output of "git log".
38 | if (script=="log") {
39 | ### Standard encoding is UTF-8.
40 | if (Encoding == "") Encoding = "UTF-8"
41 | ### Extract relevant information from variables.
42 | LongDate = substr(AuthorDate, 1, 25)
43 | DateRAW = substr(LongDate, 1, 10)
44 | DateISO = DateRAW
45 | DateTEX = DateISO
46 | gsub("-", "/", DateTEX)
47 | Time = substr(LongDate, 12, 14)
48 | ### Write file identification to vc.tex.
49 | print "%%% This file has been generated by the vc bundle for TeX."
50 | print "%%% Do not edit this file!"
51 | print "%%%"
52 | ### Write Git specific macros.
53 | print "%%% Define Git specific macros."
54 | print "\\gdef\\GITHash{" Hash "}%"
55 | print "\\gdef\\GITAbrHash{" AbrHash "}%"
56 | print "\\gdef\\GITParentHashes{" ParentHashes "}%"
57 | print "\\gdef\\GITAbrParentHashes{" AbrParentHashes "}%"
58 | print "\\gdef\\GITAuthorName{" AuthorName "}%"
59 | print "\\gdef\\GITAuthorEmail{" AuthorEmail "}%"
60 | print "\\gdef\\GITAuthorDate{" AuthorDate "}%"
61 | print "\\gdef\\GITCommitterName{" CommitterName "}%"
62 | print "\\gdef\\GITCommitterEmail{" CommitterEmail "}%"
63 | print "\\gdef\\GITCommitterDate{" CommitterDate "}%"
64 | ### Write generic version control macros.
65 | print "%%% Define generic version control macros."
66 | print "\\gdef\\VCRevision{\\GITAbrHash}%"
67 | print "\\gdef\\VCAuthor{\\GITAuthorName}%"
68 | print "\\gdef\\VCDateRAW{" DateRAW "}%"
69 | print "\\gdef\\VCDateISO{" DateISO "}%"
70 | print "\\gdef\\VCDateTEX{" DateTEX "}%"
71 | print "\\gdef\\VCTime{" Time "}%"
72 | print "\\gdef\\VCModifiedText{\\textcolor{red}{with local modifications!}}%"
73 | print "%%% Assume clean working copy."
74 | print "\\gdef\\VCModified{0}%"
75 | print "\\gdef\\VCRevisionMod{\\VCRevision}%"
76 | }
77 |
78 | ### Process output of "git status".
79 | if (script=="status") {
80 | print "%%% Is working copy modified?"
81 | print "\\gdef\\VCModified{" modified "}%"
82 | if (modified==0) {
83 | print "\\gdef\\VCRevisionMod{\\VCRevision}%"
84 | } else {
85 | print "\\gdef\\VCRevisionMod{\\VCRevision~\\VCModifiedText}%"
86 | }
87 | }
88 |
89 | }
90 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/template_for_short_CV.tex:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | \documentclass[11pt, letter]{article}
2 |
3 | % This is a tex file to make Ben Schmidt's CV.
4 | % The content is
5 |
6 | \usepackage{jk-vita}
7 | \usepackage[notes,natbib,isbn=false,backend=biber,url=false,numbermonth=true]{biblatex-chicago}
8 |
9 |
10 | %\usepackage{biblatex}
11 |
12 | % Your biblatex file is likely somewhere else.
13 | $if(bibliography)$
14 | \addbibresource{$bibliography$}
15 | $endif$
16 |
17 | \title{$title$}
18 | \name{$name$}
19 | % I guess postnoms is like junior? I dunno.
20 | \postnoms{}
21 | \address{
22 | $for(address)$
23 | $address$\\
24 | $endfor$
25 | }
26 | \www{$www$}
27 | \email{$email$}
28 | \tel{$tel$}
29 | \twitter{$twitter$}
30 | \subject{}
31 |
32 |
33 | \begin{document}
34 |
35 | \maketitle
36 |
37 | \section{appointments}
38 |
39 | $for(appointment)$
40 | \subsection{$appointment.place$}
41 | $for(appointment.items)$
42 | $appointment.items.item$. $appointment.items.date$. \\
43 | $endfor$
44 | $endfor$
45 |
46 | \section{education}
47 | % Education uses a different field called ``items.''
48 | $for(education)$
49 | $education.place$, $education.item$, $education.date$.
50 | $if(education.info)$ $for(education.info)$ $if(education.info.twopage)$ $education.info.text$ $endif$ $endfor$ $endif$ \\
51 | $endfor$
52 |
53 | % A little wonky. I want my publications divided up based on tags.
54 | % (Yes, it would be better to just do this with bib file). That's for later.
55 |
56 | \section{publications}
57 |
58 | \subsection{Academic Publications}
59 |
60 | $for(publication)$
61 | $if(publication.academic)$
62 | $if(publication.twopage)$
63 | $if(publication.citekey)$
64 | \cite{$publication.citekey$}.\\[.15cm]
65 | $else$
66 | $if(publication.author)$$publication.author$,$endif$
67 | ``$publication.title$.'' $if(publication.journal)$\textit{$publication.journal$}$if(publication.journal_info)$, $publication.journal_info$$endif$.$endif$ $publication.date$$if(publication.description)$. $publication.description$$endif$.\\[.15cm]
68 | % End of block for academic publications
69 | $endif$
70 | $endif$
71 | $else$
72 |
73 | $if(publication.public)$
74 | $else$
75 | % Raise an error if some publication is neither public nor academic;
76 | % otherwise I'll lose some out of stupidity.
77 | \error{$publication.title$}
78 | $endif$
79 | $endif$
80 | $endfor$
81 |
82 | \subsection{General Audience Publications}
83 |
84 | $for(publication)$
85 | $if(publication.twopage)$
86 | $if(publication.public)$
87 | $if(publication.citekey)$
88 | \cite{$publication.citekey$}.\\[.15cm]
89 | $else$
90 | $if(publication.author)$$publication.author$,$endif$
91 | ``$publication.title$.'' $if(publication.journal)$\textit{$publication.journal$}$if(publication.journal_info)$, $publication.journal_info$$endif$.$endif$ $publication.date$$if(publication.description)$. $publication.description$$endif$.\\[.15cm]
92 | $endif$
93 | % End of block for general publications
94 | $endif$
95 | $endif$
96 | $endfor$
97 |
98 | \section{grants}
99 |
100 | $for(grants)$
101 | $grants$\\[.15cm]
102 | $endfor$
103 |
104 | \section{selected invited talks}
105 |
106 | $for(invited_talk)$
107 | $if(invited_talk.twopage)$
108 | ``$invited_talk.title$.'' $if(invited_talk.host)$$invited_talk.host$, $endif$$invited_talk.place$. $invited_talk.date$.\\[.15cm]
109 | $endif$
110 | $endfor$
111 |
112 | \section{selected conference talks}
113 |
114 | $for(conference)$
115 | $if(conference.twopage)$
116 | ``$conference.title$.''
117 | $if(conference.host)$$conference.host$, $endif$
118 | $conference.place$.
119 | $conference.date$.\\[.15cm]
120 | $endif$
121 | $endfor$
122 |
123 | \section{service}
124 | $for(service)$
125 | %\subsection{$service.type$}
126 | $for(service.gigs)$
127 | $if(service.gigs.twopage)$
128 | $service.gigs.item$. $service.gigs.date$.\\[.15cm]
129 | $endif$
130 | $endfor$
131 | $endfor$
132 |
133 | \end{document}
134 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/template_for_long_CV.tex:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | \documentclass[11pt, letter]{article}
2 |
3 | % This is a tex file to make Ben Schmidt's CV.
4 | % The content is
5 |
6 | \usepackage{jk-vita}
7 | \usepackage[notes,natbib,isbn=false,backend=biber,url=false,numbermonth=true]{biblatex-chicago}
8 |
9 | %\usepackage{biblatex}
10 |
11 | % Your biblatex file is likely somewhere else.
12 |
13 | \title{}
14 | \name{$name$}
15 | % I guess postnoms is like junior? I dunno.
16 | \postnoms{}
17 | \address{
18 | $for(address)$
19 | $address$\\
20 | $endfor$
21 | }
22 | \www{$www$}
23 | \email{$email$}
24 | \tel{$tel$}
25 | \twitter{$twitter$}
26 | \subject{}
27 |
28 |
29 | \begin{document}
30 |
31 | \maketitle
32 |
33 |
34 |
35 |
36 | \section{appointments}
37 |
38 | $for(appointment)$
39 | \subsection{$appointment.place$}
40 | $for(appointment.items)$
41 | $appointment.items.item$. $appointment.items.date$. \\
42 | $endfor$
43 | $endfor$
44 |
45 | \section{education}
46 | % Education uses a different field called ``items.''
47 | $for(education)$
48 | \subsection{$education.place$, $education.item$, $education.date$}
49 | $if(education.info)$
50 | $for(education.info)$
51 | $if(education.info.text)$
52 | % Store certain things in a field called 'text' to allow another field
53 | % for priority.
54 | $education.info.text$ \\
55 | $else$
56 | $education.info$ \\
57 | $endif$
58 | $endfor$
59 | $endif$
60 | $endfor$
61 |
62 | % A little wonky. I want my publications divided up based on tags.
63 | % (Yes, it would be better to just do this with bib file). That's for later.
64 |
65 | \section{publications}
66 |
67 | \subsection{Academic Publications}
68 |
69 | $for(publication)$
70 | $if(publication.academic)$
71 | $if(publication.citekey)$
72 | \cite{$publication.citekey$}.\\[.15cm]
73 | $else$
74 | $if(publication.author)$$publication.author$,$endif$
75 | ``$publication.title$.'' $if(publication.journal)$\textit{$publication.journal$}$if(publication.journal_info)$, $publication.journal_info$$endif$.$endif$ $publication.date$$if(publication.description)$. $publication.description$$endif$.\\[.15cm]
76 | % End of block for academic publications
77 | $endif$
78 | $else$
79 |
80 | $if(publication.public)$
81 | $else$
82 | % Raise an error if some publication is neither public nor academic;
83 | % otherwise I'll lose some out of stupidity.
84 | \error{$publication.title$}
85 | $endif$
86 | $endif$
87 | $endfor$
88 |
89 | \subsection{General Audience Publications}
90 |
91 | $for(publication)$
92 | $if(publication.public)$
93 | $if(publication.citekey)$
94 | \cite{$publication.citekey$}.\\[.15cm]
95 | $else$
96 | $if(publication.author)$$publication.author$,$endif$
97 | ``$publication.title$.'' $if(publication.journal)$\textit{$publication.journal$}$if(publication.journal_info)$, $publication.journal_info$$endif$.$endif$ $publication.date$$if(publication.description)$. $publication.description$$endif$.\\[.15cm]
98 | $endif$
99 | % End of block for general publications
100 | $endif$
101 | $endfor$
102 |
103 |
104 | \section{grants and fellowships}
105 |
106 | $for(grants)$
107 | $grants.description$\\[.15cm]
108 | $endfor$
109 |
110 | \section{software}
111 |
112 | $for(software)$
113 | $software.title$ ($software.language$). $software.description$.\\[.15cm]
114 | $endfor$
115 |
116 | \section{invited talks}
117 |
118 | $for(invited_talk)$
119 | ``$invited_talk.title$.'' $if(invited_talk.host)$$invited_talk.host$, $endif$$invited_talk.place$. $invited_talk.date$.\\[.15cm]
120 | $endfor$
121 |
122 |
123 | \section{workshops}
124 |
125 | $for(workshop)$
126 | ``$workshop.title$.''
127 | $if(workshop.host)$$workshop.host$, $endif$$workshop.place$.
128 | $workshop.date$.\\[.15cm]
129 | $endfor$
130 |
131 | \section{conference talks}
132 |
133 | $for(conference)$
134 | ``$conference.title$.''
135 | $if(conference.host)$$conference.host$, $endif$
136 | $conference.place$.
137 | $conference.date$.\\[.15cm]
138 | $endfor$
139 |
140 | \section{courses taught}
141 |
142 | $for(teaching)$
143 | ``$teaching.title$.'' $teaching.date$. ($teaching.type$)\\[.15cm]
144 | $endfor$
145 |
146 |
147 | \section{public history}
148 |
149 | $for(public_history)$
150 | % This one has a hierarchical setup: there are multiple roles in public history, and
151 | % each can have any number of ``gigs''
152 | % These are irregular enough that I just use an ``item'' field to store the text.
153 | \subsection{$public_history.role$}
154 | $for(public_history.gigs)$
155 | $public_history.gigs.item$ $public_history.gigs.date$.\\[.15cm]
156 | $endfor$
157 | $endfor$
158 | \subsection{Selected media coverage}
159 |
160 | $for(media_coverage)$
161 | $if(media_coverage.citekey)$
162 | \fullcite{$media_coverage.citekey$}\\
163 | $else$
164 | $media_coverage.title$, $media_coverage.journal$ ($media_coverage.date$) \\[.15cm]
165 | $endif$
166 | $endfor$
167 |
168 |
169 | \section{service}
170 | $for(service)$
171 | \subsection{$service.type$}
172 | $for(service.gigs)$
173 | $service.gigs.item$. $service.gigs.date$.\\[.15cm]
174 | $endfor$
175 | $endfor$
176 |
177 |
178 | \section{research competencies}
179 | $for(competencies)$
180 | \subsection{$competencies.type$}
181 | $for(competencies.items)$
182 | $competencies.items$\\[.15cm]
183 | $endfor$
184 | $endfor$
185 |
186 |
187 |
188 | \end{document}
189 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/README.md:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | # Structured data Curriculum Vita.
2 |
3 | ## Inspirations
4 |
5 | These are templates designed to do four things:
6 |
7 | 1. Make a nice [Latex CV modeled on Kieran Healy's template](https://github.com/kjhealy/kjh-vita).
8 | 2. Do it with a clean `.sty` file that separates out content from style, copied from [James Keirstead's adaptation of Healy's CV](https://github.com/jkeirstead/jk-vita/tree/master/content)
9 | 3. Follow [Mattia Tezzele's strategy of storing the CV as structured YAML data that can be easily reconfigured, and then compiling the document out of that YAML using Pandoc.](http://mrzool.cc/writing/typesetting-automation/)
10 | 4. Simultaneously allow you to keep up alternate CVs (for instance, a 'short' two-page CV and a 'complete' longer version) from a single set of metadata, so you can edit a single file and change both.
11 |
12 | The last is the most important; it means that I can have a short CV for grants and a long CV for keeping track of everything generated off the same base data; this is otherwise hard.
13 |
14 | I've drifted far enough from any of those that it doesn't quite make sense to treat this repo as a fork (of either Healy or Keirstead).
15 |
16 | [Here's **an example** of the CV output by this repository.](http://benschmidt.org/SchmidtCV.pdf) Note that you won't be able to build this locally from the repo without a copy of my personal `.bib` file, which stores publications; you'll need to create your own and specify the location in the obvious spot in "curriculum_vitae.yaml".
17 |
18 | ## Usage
19 |
20 | `make` to build my CV in short and long form, sans citations. Though I don't know why you'd want to build my CV.
21 |
22 | ### Repurposing.
23 |
24 | You could change around some of the details in the YAML file and build
25 | your own CV. It's likely that you'll also need to define a biblatex
26 | citation bibliography somewhere (which is done in the first part of
27 | the YAML block). And you'd probably need to fudge around with the latex to change
28 | to citation parameters of your choice; and potentially remake the individual blocks along
29 | the model I give here.
30 |
31 | ## Additions
32 |
33 | The basic `.sty` file is from Keirstead, with a few portions (the funky little Twitter icon from fontawesome) folded back in from Healy's CV.
34 |
35 | Like Keirstead, I use latex for citations. (You don't have to; it can also just guess at the format from YAML data, although the Pandoc DSL for doing so makes for pretty inscrutable code.) In mine, that means that certain fields allow the presence of a 'citekey' indicator.
36 |
37 | I use the `biblatex-chicago` plugin, which (among other things that I've never gotten biblatex to do) properly differentiates newspaper articles from journal articles. (In general, I've found base biblatex inscrutable for all sorts of humanities-style citations). Because of that `biblatex-chicago` dependency, you'll need to export a `.bib` file that matches biblatex-chicago's expectations, or change the citation package in the latex template file. If you want biblatex-chicago form Zotero, I've written a [biblatex-chicago translator for Zotero; you can pull that from my fork of the Zotero translators library](https://github.com/bmschmidt/translators).
38 |
39 | ## Shortcomings
40 |
41 | There are some complications.
42 |
43 | 1. Ideally this wouldn't be using biblatex-chicago; it would just use some type of CSL with pandoc-style keys. But AFAICT, you can put a pandoc-style key into the YAML metadata, only into the body text.
44 | 2. For some types (eg, talks) the YAML categories are pretty clear. For others (eg, "Public History") there's just a single entry on 'item.' For nothing is "year" separately defined as a key, which might be nice.
45 | 3. I have no defined style for which items must end with a period and which not. You'll have to proofread.
46 |
47 | ## Next steps.
48 |
49 | ### Pandoc-citeproc processing.
50 |
51 | In my desire to use less latex, I'd much rather be using pandoc and a custom-defined CSL than biblatex. I'm sure that's possible: I just don't know how. See above on how you can't put a pandoc-style citation into YAML metadata. I'm sure there's an obvious solution that I'm missing here.
52 |
53 | ### YAML pre-processing
54 |
55 | An advantage of using YAML here is that we could use Python or another scripting language to do some useful pre-processing. This might mean
56 | * integrity checks for different item types
57 | * sorting by date
58 | * or anything else.
59 |
60 | Keirstead uses R for this purpose; parsing YAML in R sounds a little yucky to me. So python it should be; but for now I like that there's no scripting outside of the pandoc DSL, which is one of the weakest DSLs I've seen.
61 |
62 | I've currently hard-wired in this distinction between "academic" and "general audience" publications through the tags field. But the YAML could actual be reconfigured to automatically nest the two things from an original flat-level file, which would be much cleaner.
63 |
64 | ### NSF-style CV
65 |
66 | If I keep doing NSF grants, it would be good to have something that makes things in their nutty style.
67 |
68 | ### Standardize **everything**
69 |
70 | Really, what this *should* be is a standard YAML form for describing academic accomplishments which could then be parsed in all sorts of ways. The YAML structure could drive an "upcoming talks" widget on a jekyll that would use fields (like time of day) inappropriate for a CV. It could generate annual reports for departmental review. It could automatically add citations of everything you write to each one of your future papers, boosting your k-score.
71 |
72 | With sufficiently advanced machine learning, maybe it could even fetch your articles using a DOI, generate and submit new articles in the same style, thus freeing up more of your time to work on polishing your CV instead of doing any actual goddamn work for once.
73 |
74 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/biblatex-chicago.sty:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | % $Id: biblatex-chicago.sty,v 0.1.1.61 2017/04/19 13:08:02 dfussner Exp $
2 |
3 | % Copyright (c) 2009-2017 David Fussner. This package is
4 | % author-maintained.
5 | %
6 | % This work may be copied, distributed and/or modified under the
7 | % conditions of the LaTeX Project Public License, either version 1.3 of
8 | % this license or (at your option) any later version. The latest
9 | % version of this license is in http://www.latex-project.org/lppl.txt
10 | % and version 1.3 or later is part of all distributions of LaTeX version
11 | % 2005/12/01 or later. This software is provided as is,
12 | % without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied, including,
13 | % but not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability and
14 | % fitness for a particular purpose.
15 |
16 | \ProvidesPackage{biblatex-chicago}[2017/04/19 v 3.7 biblatex style]
17 |
18 | \RequirePackage{etoolbox}
19 |
20 | \DeclareOption{authordate}{\def\cms@style{authordate}}
21 | \DeclareOption{notes}{\def\cms@style{notes}}
22 | \DeclareOption{authordate-trad}{\def\cms@style{authordatetrad}}
23 | \DeclareOption{authordate15}{\def\cms@style{authordateold}}
24 | \DeclareOption{notes15}{\def\cms@style{notesold}}
25 | \DeclareOption*{\eappto\cms@options{\CurrentOption,}}
26 | \let\cms@options\empty
27 | \ExecuteOptions{notes}%
28 |
29 | \newtoggle{cms@nomark}
30 |
31 | \DeclareOption{footmarkoff}{\global\toggletrue{cms@nomark}}
32 |
33 | \DeclareOption{natbib}{%
34 | \PassOptionsToPackage{natbib}{biblatex}}
35 |
36 | \DeclareOption{backend=biber}{%
37 | \PassOptionsToPackage{\CurrentOption}{biblatex}}%
38 |
39 | \DeclareOption{backend=bibtex}{%
40 | \PassOptionsToPackage{\CurrentOption}{biblatex}%
41 | \def\blx@sorting@cms{1}}%
42 |
43 | \DeclareOption{backend=bibtex8}{%
44 | \PassOptionsToPackage{\CurrentOption}{biblatex}%
45 | \def\blx@sorting@cms{1}}%
46 |
47 | \DeclareOption{backend=bibtexu}{%
48 | \PassOptionsToPackage{\CurrentOption}{biblatex}%
49 | \def\blx@sorting@cms{1}}%
50 |
51 | \ProcessOptions*
52 |
53 | \def\cms@authordate{%
54 | \RequirePackage[style=chicago-authordate]{biblatex}%
55 | \ExecuteBibliographyOptions{%
56 | pagetracker=true,autocite=inline,alldates=comp,
57 | uniquename=minfull,useeditor=true,usetranslator=true,usenamec=true,
58 | ibidtracker=constrict,sorting=cms,punctfont,cmslos=true,nodates,
59 | uniquelist=minyear,maxbibnames=10,minbibnames=7,sortcase=false,
60 | abbreviate=false,dateabbrev=false,avdate=true}}
61 |
62 | \def\cms@notes{%
63 | \RequirePackage[style=chicago-notes]{biblatex}%
64 | \ExecuteBibliographyOptions{%
65 | pagetracker=true,autocite=footnote,abbreviate=false,alldates=comp,
66 | citetracker=true,ibidtracker=constrict,usetranslator=true,
67 | usenamec=true,loccittracker=constrict,dateabbrev=false,
68 | maxbibnames=10,minbibnames=7,sorting=cms,sortcase=false}}
69 |
70 | \def\cms@authordatetrad{%
71 | \RequirePackage[style=chicago-authordate-trad]{biblatex}%
72 | \ExecuteBibliographyOptions{%
73 | pagetracker=true,autocite=inline,alldates=comp,
74 | uniquename=minfull,useeditor=true,usetranslator=true,usenamec=true,
75 | ibidtracker=constrict,sorting=cms,punctfont,cmslos=true,nodates,
76 | uniquelist=minyear,maxbibnames=10,minbibnames=7,sortcase=false,
77 | abbreviate=false,dateabbrev=false,avdate=true}}
78 |
79 | \def\cms@authordateold{%
80 | \RequirePackage[style=chicago-authordate15]{biblatex}%
81 | \ExecuteBibliographyOptions{%
82 | pagetracker=true,autocite=inline,alldates=comp,
83 | uniquename=minfull,useeditor=true,usetranslator=true,usecompiler=true,
84 | ibidtracker=constrict,sorting=cms,punctfont,cmslos=true,nodates,
85 | uniquelist=minyear,maxbibnames=10,minbibnames=7,sortcase=false}}
86 |
87 | \def\cms@notesold{%
88 | \RequirePackage[style=chicago-notes15]{biblatex}%
89 | \ExecuteBibliographyOptions{%
90 | pagetracker=true,autocite=footnote,abbreviate=false,alldates=comp,
91 | citetracker=true,ibidtracker=constrict,usetranslator=true,
92 | usecompiler=true,loccittracker=constrict,dateabbrev=false,
93 | maxbibnames=10,minbibnames=7}}
94 |
95 | \csuse{cms@\cms@style}
96 | \undef\cms@authordate
97 | \undef\cms@notes
98 | \undef\cms@authordatetrad
99 | \undef\cms@authordateold
100 | \undef\cms@notesold
101 | \expandafter\ExecuteBibliographyOptions\expandafter{\cms@options}
102 |
103 | \setlength{\bibitemsep}{0.5\baselineskip plus 0.5\baselineskip}
104 | \setlength{\bibhang}{2em}
105 | \setlength{\lositemsep}{0.25\baselineskip plus 0.25\baselineskip}
106 |
107 | \setcounter{biburllcpenalty}{5000}
108 | \setcounter{biburlucpenalty}{9000}
109 | \setcounter{biburlnumpenalty}{9000}
110 |
111 | \renewcommand*{\bibnamedash}{\rule[.4ex]{3em}{.6pt}}
112 |
113 | \iftoggle{cms@nomark}
114 | {}
115 | {\@ifclassloaded{memoir}%
116 | {\blx@warning@noline{%
117 | Since you are using the 'memoir' class,\MessageBreak
118 | I'm leaving the formatting of the foot- and/or\MessageBreak
119 | end-note mark and text to you.}}%
120 | {\renewcommand\@makefntext[1]{% Provides in-line footnote marks
121 | \setlength\parindent{1em}%
122 | \noindent
123 | \makebox[2.3em][r]{\@thefnmark.\,\,}#1}
124 | \@ifpackageloaded{endnotes}% Provides in-line endnote marks
125 | {\def\enotesize{\small}% This size recommended by the Manual
126 | \renewcommand{\enoteformat}{%
127 | \renewcommand{\makeenmark}{%
128 | \hbox{\theenmark.\,\,}}
129 | \rightskip\z@ \leftskip\z@ \parindent=2.3em
130 | \leavevmode\llap{\makeenmark}}}
131 | {}}}
132 |
133 | \@ifpackageloaded{babel}
134 | {\ifthenelse{\equal{\languagename}{american}}
135 | {\DeclareLanguageMapping{american}{cms-american}}%
136 | {\ifthenelse{\equal{\languagename}{english}}%
137 | {\DeclareLanguageMapping{english}{cms-american}}%
138 | {\DeclareLanguageMapping{american}{cms-american}}}}%
139 | {\DeclareLanguageMapping{english}{cms-american}}
140 |
141 | \DeclareLanguageMapping{british}{cms-british}
142 | \DeclareLanguageMapping{german}{cms-german}
143 | \DeclareLanguageMapping{french}{cms-french}
144 | \DeclareLanguageMapping{finnish}{cms-finnish}
145 | \DeclareLanguageMapping{ngerman}{cms-ngerman}
146 | \DeclareLanguageMapping{icelandic}{cms-icelandic}
147 | \DeclareLanguageMapping{norsk}{cms-norsk}
148 | \DeclareLanguageMapping{nynorsk}{cms-nynorsk}
149 | \DeclareLanguageMapping{swedish}{cms-swedish}
150 |
151 | \ifundef\bbl@loaded{\let\bbl@loaded\@empty}{}% For old versions of babel
152 |
153 | \endinput
154 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/jk-vita.sty:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | %% Curriculum Vitae style file
2 | %%
3 | %% James Keirstead
4 | %% Last updated: 2 March 2015
5 | %%
6 | %% This file contains elements from:
7 | %% - http://robjhyndman.com/research/cv.sty
8 | %% - http://kjhealy.github.com/kjh-vita
9 | %%
10 |
11 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
12 | %% Load required packages
13 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
14 | \usepackage{paralist,ragged2e,datetime}
15 | \usepackage{hyperref,fancyhdr,enumitem,color}
16 | \usepackage[centering]{geometry}
17 | \usepackage{fontspec}
18 | \usepackage{fontawesome5}
19 | \usepackage[compact,small,sf,bf]{titlesec}
20 |
21 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
22 | %% Git version tracking
23 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
24 |
25 | %% If you don't use git or the vc package (from CTAN), comment this out.
26 | %% If you comment it out, be sure to remove the \rfoot comment below, too.
27 | %% See vc manual to compile with xelatex -enable-write18 vita
28 | \immediate\write18{vc.sh}
29 | \input{vc}
30 |
31 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
32 | %% Fonts and colours
33 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
34 | %% needed for xelatex to work
35 | \usepackage{fontspec}
36 | \usepackage{xunicode}
37 |
38 | %% color for the links
39 | \usepackage[usenames,dvipsnames]{xcolor}
40 | \definecolor{ImperialBlue}{rgb}{0.082,0.416,0.608}
41 | \definecolor{ImperialLightBlue}{rgb}{0.545,0.682,0.8}
42 |
43 | %% Choose fonts for use with xelatex
44 | %% Minion and Myriad are widely available, from Adobe.
45 | %% Pragmata is available to buy at http://www.fsd.it/fonts/pragma.htm
46 | %% and is worth every penny. Any good monospace font will work fine, though.
47 | %% Consolas or inconsolata are good alternatives.
48 |
49 | %%\setromanfont[Mapping={tex-text},Numbers={OldStyle},Ligatures={Common}]{Minion Pro}
50 | %%\setsansfont[Mapping=tex-text,Colour=ImperialBlue]{Myriad Pro}
51 | %%\setmonofont[Mapping=tex-text,Scale=0.9]{Avenir Next Condensed Regular} % Consolas, Pragmata, Lucida Console
52 |
53 | \setromanfont[Mapping={tex-text},Numbers={OldStyle},Ligatures={Common}]{Times New Roman}
54 | \setsansfont[Mapping=tex-text,Colour=ImperialBlue]{Arial}
55 | \setmonofont[Mapping=tex-text,Scale=0.9]{Courier} % Consolas, Pragmata, Lucida Console
56 |
57 |
58 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
59 | %% Header and footer
60 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
61 |
62 | % git revision info inserted via external script -- see docs for vc
63 | % package for details. comment out this line if you're not using vc,
64 | % and also remove the \input{vc} line above.
65 |
66 | % What use is a commit number?
67 | %\newcommand{\gitinfo}{\textcolor{Gray}{\texttt{\scriptsize \VCRevision\ on \VCDateTEX}}}
68 | \newcommand{\gitinfo}{\textcolor{Gray}{\texttt{\scriptsize Last updated \VCDateTEX}}}
69 |
70 | % Style for the front page
71 | \fancypagestyle{myplain}{%
72 | \fancyhf{}
73 | \renewcommand\headrulewidth{0pt}
74 | \renewcommand\footrulewidth{0pt}
75 | \fancyfoot[R]{\gitinfo}
76 | }
77 |
78 | % Style for the other pages
79 | \pagestyle{fancy}
80 | \renewcommand{\headrulewidth}{0pt}
81 | \fancyhead{}
82 | \fancyfoot{}
83 | \rhead{{\scriptsize\thepage}}
84 | %Healey on puts the revision on page 1.
85 | %\rfoot{\gitinfo}
86 |
87 |
88 | %%------------------------------------------------------------------------
89 | %% Basic name functions and title box
90 | %%------------------------------------------------------------------------
91 |
92 | %% used below in the hyperref declaration and address banner section.
93 | \def\title#1{\def\@title{#1}}
94 | \def\name#1{\def\@name{#1}}
95 | \def\www#1{\def\@www{#1}}
96 | \def\email#1{\def\@email{#1}}
97 | \def\twitter#1{\def\@twitter{#1}}
98 | \def\tel#1{\def\@tel{#1}}
99 | \def\postnoms#1{\def\@postnoms{#1}}
100 | \def\address#1{\def\@address{#1}}
101 | \def\subject#1{\def\@subject{#1}}
102 |
103 | %% Date format (if you wanted to include the date but you'll see below
104 | %% I just use the version control info instead
105 | % \newdateformat{rjh}{\monthname~\THEYEAR}
106 | % \rjh
107 | \date{} % not used (revision control instead)
108 |
109 | %% hyperlinks
110 | \AtBeginDocument{%
111 | \def\keywords{\@name, Vita, CV, Resume, \@subject}
112 | \hypersetup{xetex,
113 | colorlinks=true,
114 | urlcolor=ImperialBlue,
115 | plainpages=false,
116 | pdfpagelabels,
117 | bookmarksnumbered,
118 | pdftitle={Vita},
119 | pagebackref,
120 | pdfauthor={\@name},
121 | pdfkeywords={\keywords}
122 | }
123 | }
124 |
125 | \def\maketitle{
126 | \thispagestyle{myplain}
127 |
128 | % Pull header block up
129 | \vspace*{-6em}
130 |
131 |
132 | \begin{minipage}[t]{3.5in}
133 | \flushright {\footnotesize \@address}
134 | \end{minipage}
135 | \hfill
136 | \begin{minipage}[t]{1.7in}
137 | \flushright
138 | {\scriptsize \texttt{\@tel \, \faPhone} } \\
139 | {\scriptsize \texttt{\href{mailto:\@email}{\@email}} \, \faEnvelope} \\
140 | {\scriptsize \texttt{\href{http://\@www}{\@www}} \, \faGlobe} \\
141 | {\scriptsize \texttt{\href{http://twitter.com/\@twitter}{\@twitter} \, \faTwitter}}
142 | \end{minipage}
143 |
144 | \bigskip
145 | \bigskip
146 |
147 | %% Name
148 | \noindent{\LARGE\scshape{\@title\ \@name}} {\scriptsize \textsc{\@postnoms}}\\
149 | \bigskip
150 | \bigskip
151 |
152 | }
153 |
154 | %%------------------------------------------------------------------------
155 | %% Section styling
156 | %%------------------------------------------------------------------------
157 |
158 | %% This includes a fudge from the following link in order to get the
159 | %% subsection to align with a section
160 | %% http://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/19200/titlesec-remove-space-after-empty-margin-section
161 |
162 | \makeatletter
163 | \newif\ifaftersec\aftersecfalse
164 |
165 | \newcommand\setsubskip{%
166 | \global\aftersectrue
167 | \everypar{%
168 | \global\aftersecfalse
169 | \if@noskipsec
170 | \global\@noskipsecfalse
171 | \clubpenalty\@M
172 | \hskip-\parindent
173 | \begingroup
174 | \@svsechd\unskip{\hspace{\@tempskipb}}%
175 | \endgroup
176 | \else
177 | \clubpenalty\@clubpenalty\everypar{}%
178 | \fi}}
179 |
180 | \newcommand\subskip{%
181 | \ifaftersec
182 | \removelastskip% EDIT 2
183 | \vspace{-\baselineskip}% EDIT 2 ??????????????
184 | \fi
185 | \global\aftersecfalse}
186 |
187 | % Section styling
188 | \titleformat{\section}[leftmargin]{\raggedleft\sffamily\footnotesize}{}{0pt}{}[\setsubskip]
189 | \titlespacing*{\section}{2cm}{2.5ex}{0.5cm}
190 |
191 | % Subsection styling
192 | \titleformat{\subsection}{\subskip\itshape}{}{0pt}{}[]
193 | \titlespacing*{\subsection}{0pt}{2ex}{1ex}
194 |
195 | \raggedbottom
196 | \makeatother
197 |
198 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
199 | %% Bibliography formatting
200 | %% ------------------------------------------------------------------------
201 |
202 | % \usepackage[uniquename=init,dashed=false,doi=false,isbn=false,backend=biber]{biblatex-chicago}
203 | \usepackage[notes,natbib,isbn=false,backend=biber,url=false,numbermonth=true]{biblatex-chicago}
204 |
205 | \DeclareFieldFormat{url}{\url{#1}}
206 | \DeclareFieldFormat[article]{pages}{#1}
207 | \DeclareFieldFormat[inproceedings]{pages}{\lowercase{pp.}#1}
208 | \DeclareFieldFormat[incollection]{pages}{\lowercase{pp.}#1}
209 | \DeclareFieldFormat[article]{volume}{\mkbibbold{#1}}
210 | \DeclareFieldFormat[article]{number}{\mkbibparens{#1}}
211 | \DeclareFieldFormat[article]{title}{\MakeCapital{#1}}
212 | \DeclareFieldFormat[article]{url}{}
213 | \DeclareFieldFormat[inproceedings]{title}{#1}
214 | \DeclareFieldFormat{shorthandwidth}{#1}
215 | \DeclareFieldFormat{extrayear}{}
216 |
217 | % No dot before number of articles
218 | \usepackage{xpatch}
219 | \xpatchbibmacro{volume+number+eid}{\setunit*{\adddot}}{}{}{}
220 |
221 | % Remove In: for an article.
222 | \renewbibmacro{in:}{%
223 | \ifentrytype{article}{}{%
224 | \printtext{\bibstring{in}\intitlepunct}}}
225 |
226 | % Bibliography categories
227 | \def\makebibcategory#1#2{\DeclareBibliographyCategory{#1}\defbibheading{#1}{\subsection*{#2}}}
228 | \makebibcategory{books}{Books}
229 | \makebibcategory{papers}{Journal articles}
230 | \makebibcategory{chapters}{Book chapters}
231 | \makebibcategory{conferences}{Conference papers \& posters}
232 | \makebibcategory{techreports}{Unpublished working papers}
233 | \makebibcategory{bookreviews}{Book reviews}
234 | \makebibcategory{editorials}{Editorials}
235 | \makebibcategory{phd}{PhD thesis}
236 | \makebibcategory{subpapers}{Submitted papers}
237 | \makebibcategory{curpapers}{Current projects}
238 | \makebibcategory{other}{Reviews, software \& other writing}
239 |
240 | \setlength{\bibitemsep}{2.5pt}
241 | \setlength{\bibhang}{.8cm}
242 | %\renewcommand{\bibfont}{\fontsize{12}{14}}
243 |
244 | \renewcommand*{\bibitem}{\addtocounter{papers}{1}\item \mbox{}\hskip-0.85cm\hbox to 0.85cm{\hfill\arabic{papers}.~~}}
245 | \defbibenvironment{bibliography}
246 | {\list{}
247 | {\setlength{\leftmargin}{\bibhang}%
248 | \setlength{\itemsep}{\bibitemsep}%
249 | \setlength{\parsep}{\bibparsep}}}
250 | {\endlist}
251 | {\bibitem}
252 |
253 | \newenvironment{publications}{\section{Publications}\label{papersstart}}%
254 | {\label{papersend}\addtocounter{sumpapers}{-1}\refstepcounter{sumpapers}\label{sumpapers}}
255 |
256 | \def\printbib#1{\printbibliography[category=#1,heading=#1]\lastref{sumpapers}}
257 | \renewcommand{\bibfont}{\normalfont\fontsize{11}{13.4}\rmfamily}
258 | % Counters for keeping track of papers
259 | \newcounter{papers}\setcounter{papers}{0}
260 | \newcounter{sumpapers}\setcounter{sumpapers}{0}
261 | \def\lastref#1{\addtocounter{#1}{\value{papers}}\setcounter{papers}{0}}
262 |
263 | % Add all papers in the bib file.
264 | \nocite{*}
265 |
266 | %%%------------------------------------------------------------------------
267 | %%% Local commands
268 | %%%------------------------------------------------------------------------
269 | %% No bullets on labels
270 | \renewcommand{\labelitemi}{~}
271 |
272 | %% Custom hanging indent for vita items
273 | \def\ind{\hangindent=1 true cm\hangafter=1 \noindent}
274 | \def\labelitemi{~}
275 | \renewcommand{\labelitemii}{~}
276 |
277 | %%%------------------------------------------------------------------------
278 | %% Geometry stuff
279 | %%%------------------------------------------------------------------------
280 |
281 | % This command allows hyphenation, where \raggedright does not
282 | \RaggedRight
283 | \sloppy
284 |
285 | % Miscellaneous dimensions
286 | \setlength{\parskip}{0ex}
287 | \setlength{\parindent}{0em}
288 | \setlength{\headheight}{15pt}
289 | \setlength{\tabcolsep}{0.15cm}
290 | \clubpenalty = 10000
291 | \widowpenalty = 10000
292 | \setlist{itemsep=1pt}
293 | \setdescription{labelwidth=1.2cm,leftmargin=1.5cm,labelindent=1.5cm,font=\rm}
294 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/curriculum_vitae.yaml:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | ---
2 | name: Benjamin MacDonald Schmidt
3 | title: ""
4 | address:
5 | - 36 E 20th st, floor 8
6 | - Manhattan, NY 10003
7 | email: bmschmidt@gmail.com
8 | twitter: benmschmidt
9 | www: benschmidt.org
10 | tel: 609.619.0629
11 | bibliography: tmp.bib
12 |
13 | appointment:
14 | - place: Nomic AI
15 | items:
16 | -
17 | item: Vice President, Information Design
18 | date: September 2022-present
19 | description: |
20 | First hire at at pre-revenue stealth startup after co-founders raised seed round;
21 | grew company through Series A funding from 3 employees to nearly 20. Led front-end development
22 | and managed front-end team while helping lead Atlas product to several large enterprise contracts.
23 | -
24 | place: New York University
25 | items:
26 | -
27 | item: Clinical Associate Professor of History
28 | date: September 2019–September 2022
29 | description: |
30 | Taught and researched at intersection of history and data science. Published articles in
31 | *Journal of Information Science and Technology*, *Proceedings of the National
32 | Academy of Sciences*.
33 | Co-directed Humanities Lab group detailing issues around data collection and migrant records.
34 | -
35 | item: Director of Digital Humanities
36 | date: September 2019–Present
37 | description: |
38 | Launched and oversaw first three years of 10-year, $1,000,000 seed grant program.
39 | Launched and secured funding for new summer graduate fellowship.
40 | Direct Graduate Certificate program in Digital Humanities inside
41 | Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.
42 | Serve on research computing faculty advisory board setting university-wide technology policy.
43 | -
44 | place: Northeastern University
45 | items:
46 | -
47 | item: Assistant Professor of History
48 | date: August 2013–June 2019
49 | description: |
50 | Taught and supervised staff in large lecture classes and graduate students. Constructed
51 | data visualizations and research under grants and fellowships.
52 | -
53 | item: Core Faculty, NuLab for Texts, Maps, and Networks
54 | date: August 2013–June 2019
55 | description: Developed graduate curriculum in digital humanities.
56 | -
57 | item: Affiliate Faculty, Program in Information Design and Visualization
58 | date: November 2014–June 2019
59 | -
60 | place: Harvard University, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
61 | items:
62 | -
63 | item: Graduate Fellow, Cultural Observatory @ Harvard
64 | date: 2011–2013
65 | description: Led group building data visualization and analysis software *Bookworm* and conducted
66 | independent research in digital humanities.
67 | - place: American Academy of Arts and Sciences
68 | items:
69 | -
70 | item: Program Assistant/Program Associate
71 | date: November 2003-August 2005
72 | description: |
73 | Researched, performed data analysis, and wrote descriptions
74 | of quantitative data for prototype edition of the Academy's now-
75 | successful *Humanities Indicators*.
76 |
77 | education:
78 | -
79 | place: Princeton University
80 | item: Ph.D. in History
81 | date: November 2013
82 | info:
83 | -
84 | text: 'Dissertation: "Paying Attention: The psychological subject in advertising, education, and culture, 1890–1960."'
85 | twopage: true
86 | - 'Committee: Daniel Rodgers (advisor), Emily Thompson (first reader), Anthony Grafton (second reader), Daniel Cohen (outside reader).'
87 | -
88 | place: Princeton University
89 | item: M.A. in History
90 | date: June 2007
91 | info:
92 | - Major field in U.S. History 1865–2000.
93 | - Minor fields in European intellectual history 1870–2000 and American intellectual and cultural history.
94 | -
95 | place: Harvard University
96 | item: A.B. in Social Studies, magna cum laude
97 | date: June 2003
98 | info:
99 | - 'Honors thesis: "Adorno on the Air: Theodor Adorno and the Princeton Radio Research Project." Advisor: Peter Eli Gordon.'
100 |
101 | publication:
102 | -
103 | title: "Artificial Intelligence and the Historical Profession Roundtable"
104 | journal: "American Historical Review"
105 | date: Accepted (under editing)
106 | academic: true
107 | resume: true
108 | -
109 | title: "Uncontrolled corpus composition drives an apparent surge in cognitive distortions. Benjamin Schmidt, Steven T. Piantadosi, Kyle Mahowald. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Nov 2021, 118 (45) e2115010118; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2115010118."
110 | journal: "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences"
111 | date: 2021-11
112 | twopage: true
113 | academic: true
114 | resume: true
115 | -
116 | title: "Two volumes: Slavery, Cliometrics, and the pasts and future of American Digital History"
117 | journal: "Debates in the Digital Humanities: *Computational Humanities*"
118 | date: Full volume under review
119 | academic: true
120 | -
121 | author: "Organisciak, P., Schmidt, B. M., & Downie, J. S."
122 | title: "Giving shape to large digital libraries through exploratory data analysis."
123 | journal: "Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 73( 2), 317–332."
124 | doi: "https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.24547"
125 | date: 2021-09
126 | academic: true
127 | resume: true
128 | -
129 | title: "Creating Data: The Origins of Digitization in the American State, 1840-1940"
130 | date: "Digital Monograph, in progress"
131 | twopage: true
132 | academic: true
133 | -
134 | title: "H-Lab: Asylum and Im/migration"
135 | author: "Sibylle Fischer, Ellen Noonan, and Benjamin M. Schmidt"
136 | date: 2021-11
137 | academic: true
138 | journal: "Esferas Volume 12: Migración y Asilo"
139 | twopage: false
140 | -
141 | author: "Peter Organisciak, Grace Therrell, Maggie Ryan, Benjamin MacDonald Schmidt"
142 | title: Examining patterns of text reuse in digitized text collections
143 | date: 2019-06-02
144 | journal: 2019 ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL)
145 | academic: true
146 | twopage: true
147 | -
148 | title: "Are College Students Killing Townies?"
149 | author: "Benjamin Schmidt"
150 | journal: "The Chronicle of Higher Education"
151 | date: 2020-12-17
152 | twopage: false
153 | academic: false
154 | public: true
155 | -
156 | fcitekey: schmidt\_history\_2018
157 | title: "The History Major since the Great Recession"
158 | author: "Benjamin Schmidt"
159 | journal: "Perspectives"
160 | date: 2018 December
161 | twopage: false
162 | academic: false
163 | public: true
164 | resume: true
165 | -
166 | fcitekey: schmidt\_stable\_2018
167 | title: "Stable Random Projection: Lightweight, General-Purpose Dimensionality Reduction for Digitized Libraries"
168 | date: 2018-09-30
169 | journal: "Journal of Cultural Analytics"
170 | doi: 10.22148/16.025
171 | academic: true
172 | twopage: true
173 | -
174 | fcitekey: schmidt\_modeling\_2018
175 | title: "Modeling Time,"
176 | journal: "in 'The Shape of Data in Digital Humanities,' ed. Julia Flanders and Fotis Jannidis"
177 | date: (Routledge, 2018)
178 | academic: true
179 | twopage: false
180 | -
181 | fcitekey: schmidt\_digital\_2016
182 | title: "Do Digital Humanists Need to Understand Algorithms?"
183 | journal: Debates in the Digital Humanities 2016
184 | journal_info: ed. Matthew Gold and Lauren Klein
185 | type: chapter
186 | date: 2016
187 | place: University of Minnesota Press
188 | academic: true
189 | twopage: true
190 | -
191 | fcitekey: schmidt\_plot\_2015
192 | date: 2015
193 | title: "Plot Arceology: A Vector Space Model of Plot"
194 | journal: "Proceedings of the 2015 IEEE International Conference on Big Data"
195 | academic: true
196 | peer_reviewed: true
197 | twopage: true
198 | resume: true
199 | -
200 | fcitekey: schmidt\_words\_2013
201 | date: April 2013
202 | title: "Words Alone: Dismantling Topic Models in the Humanities"
203 | journal: Journal of Digital Humanities
204 | journal_info: Vol. 2 No. 1
205 | url: http://journalofdigitalhumanities.org/2-1/words-alone-by-benjamin-m-schmidt/
206 | twopage: true
207 | academic: true
208 | -
209 | fcitekey: schmidt\_theory\_2012
210 | date: April 2012
211 | title: "Theory First"
212 | journal: Journal of Digital Humanities
213 | journal_info: Vol. 1 No. 1
214 | twopage: false
215 | academic: true
216 | -
217 | date: November 2010–2020
218 | url: sappingattention.blogspot.com
219 | title: Sapping Attention
220 | description: Blog publishing original research and discussion in digital humanities, data visualization, and text mining
221 | academic: true
222 | blog: true
223 | -
224 | date: 2011-Present
225 | title: Bookworm
226 | url: https://github.com/Bookworm-project
227 | description: Interactive website, database, and API
228 | twopage: false
229 | academic: true
230 | software: true
231 | -
232 | fcitekey: schmidt\_ranking\_2007
233 | date: July 2007
234 | author: "Benjamin MacDonald Schmidt and Matthew Chingos"
235 | title: "Ranking Doctoral Programs by Placement: A New Method"
236 | journal: "PS: Political Science & Politics"
237 | journal_info: Vol 40, pages 523-529
238 | twopage: true
239 | academic: true
240 | peer_reviewed: true
241 | resume: true
242 | -
243 | fcitekey: schmidt\_is\_2015
244 | title: "Is It Fair to Rate Professors Online?, The New York Times (Room for debate)"
245 | date: December 16, 2015
246 | public: true
247 | twopage: false
248 | -
249 | author: "Ben Schmidt"
250 | title: "The Humanities are in Crisis"
251 | journal: "The Atlantic"
252 | date: "August 23, 2018"
253 | url: "https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2018/08/the-humanities-face-a-crisisof-confidence/567565/"
254 | public: true
255 | twopage: true
256 | resume: true
257 | -
258 | author: "Ben Schmidt and Mitch Fraas"
259 | title: "The Language of the State of the Union"
260 | journal: "The Atlantic"
261 | date: "January 18, 2015"
262 | url: "http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2015/01/the-language-of-the-state-of-the-union/384575/"
263 | twopage: true
264 | public: true
265 | -
266 | author: "Mitch Fraas and Ben Schmidt"
267 | title: "Mapping the State of the Union"
268 | journal: "The Atlantic"
269 | date: "January 18, 2015"
270 | url: "http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2015/01/the-language-of-the-state-of-the-union/384575/"
271 | public: true
272 | twopage: false
273 | -
274 | fcitekey: schmidt\_data\_2013
275 | title: "The data shows there's no real crisis"
276 | journal: "The New York Times"
277 | journal_info: "Room for Debate"
278 | date: "November 4, 2013"
279 | url: "http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2015/01/the-language-of-the-state-of-the-union/384575/"
280 | public: true
281 | -
282 | title: The Language of Lincoln
283 | journal: The Atlantic
284 | date: January 10, 2013
285 | url: "http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2013/01/nobody-said-racial-equality-in-1865-the-anachronistic-english-of-lincoln/266990/"
286 | public: true
287 | -
288 | title: The Foreign Language of Mad Men
289 | journal: The Atlantic
290 | date: March 22, 2012
291 | url: "http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2013/01/nobody-said-racial-equality-in-1865-the-anachronistic-english-of-lincoln/266990/"
292 | public: true
293 | -
294 | title: Prochronisms
295 | url: prochronism.com
296 | description: "Blog discussing changes in historical language through the lens of anachronisms in popular culture"
297 | date: 2012-2015
298 | public: true
299 |
300 |
301 | grants:
302 | -
303 | resume: false
304 | description: "Asylum Lab, NYU Center for the Humanities. Bennett-Polonsky Humanities Labs, $50,000 Internal Grant with Sibylle Fischer and Ellen Noonan."
305 | -
306 | description: "Similarity and Duplication in Digital Libraries. IMLS grant. Co-PI; Peter Organisciak, University of Denver."
307 | resume: true
308 | -
309 | description: "NEH-Mellon Fellowships for Digital Publication for *Creating Data*, Calendar Year 2018. $50,400."
310 | resume: false
311 | -
312 | description: "Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs: Visiting Fellow, Spring 2017"
313 | resume: false
314 | -
315 | description: Proteus Project, development grant from Mellon Foundation. Join with University of Massachusetts. Northeastern co-director (with David Smith, Ryan Cordell, and Elizabeth Dillon). 2015-2016.
316 | resume: false
317 | -
318 | description: Bookworm Project, $350,000 implementation grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (2014-2016). Joint with University of Illinois and Rice University; Northeastern University project lead.
319 | resume: true
320 | -
321 | description: Bookworm Project, $50,000 continuation grant from the Digital Public Library of America (2013). Project developer and grant-writer. 2013.
322 | resume: false
323 |
324 | invited_talk:
325 | -
326 | date: March 13, 2020 (Cancelled due to COVID-19)
327 | title: "The Humanities in the Age of STEM"
328 | host: American Council of Learned Societies
329 | twopage: false
330 | -
331 | date: January 14, 2020
332 | title: "Data in search of an argument"
333 | host: "History as a Data Science Workshop (guest)"
334 | place: "Columbia University, New York"
335 | twopage: false
336 | -
337 | date: January 28, 2018
338 | title: "Reordering the digital library: what do 21st century algorithms make out of 19th century collections"
339 | host: "University of North Carolina"
340 | place: "Chapel Hill"
341 | twopage: true
342 | -
343 | date: July 29, 2016
344 | title: "Visualizing and classifying large digital libraries"
345 | host: New York Public Library
346 | place: New York City
347 | twopage: false
348 | -
349 | date: June 7, 2016
350 | title: "Data Visualization for the Humanities"
351 | host: Digital Futures Initiative
352 | place: Grinnell College
353 | twopage: false
354 | -
355 | date: November 12, 2015
356 | title: "Historical Data Visualization"
357 | host: Institute for Quantitative Theory and Methods Data Visualization speaker series
358 | place: Emory University
359 | twopage: false
360 | -
361 | date: May 11, 2015
362 | title: "Plot Arceology"
363 | host: Literary Lab
364 | place: Stanford University
365 | -
366 | date: May 10, 2015
367 | title: "Reconstructing the Map"
368 | host: Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis
369 | place: Stanford University
370 | twopage: true
371 | -
372 | title: "Aggregate Americans: The US Census Bureau, data visualization, 1880-1940"
373 | place: Washington University in St Louis
374 | date: February 26, 2015
375 | twopage: false
376 | -
377 | date: November 12, 2014
378 | title: "Applying a grammar of visualization to millions of texts: the Bookworm project"
379 | host: College of Art, Media, and Design
380 | place: Northeastern University
381 | -
382 | title: "Bookworm: Exploring Massive Textual Collections through Metadata"
383 | host: Yale University Library
384 | place: Yale University
385 | date: May 12, 2014
386 | twopage: true
387 | -
388 | title: "Data-Driven Histories: Reinterpreting Nineteenth-Century Data"
389 | host: Department of History
390 | place: University of Georgia
391 | date: April 22, 2014
392 | twopage: true
393 | -
394 | title: "Data narratives and group dynamics in digital history: a case study in ships' logs"
395 | host: Digital History symposium and roundtable
396 | place: University of Nebraska, Lincoln
397 | date: April 11, 2014
398 | twopage: false
399 | -
400 | title: "History for the Digital Future: Digital Forms of Historical Scholarship"
401 | host: Friday Workshop Series of the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies
402 | place: University of Michigan
403 | date: January 31, 2014
404 | twopage: true
405 | -
406 | title: "'Big Data' across Disciplines, from Cultural Studies to Culturomics"
407 | host: Workshop in History, Culture and Society
408 | place: Sociology Department, Harvard University
409 | date: March 27, 2013
410 | -
411 | title: "Unintended Consequences: Digital Reading and the Loci of Cultural Change"
412 | host: Institute for Historical Research
413 | place: London, UK
414 | date: March 12, 2013
415 | -
416 | title: "Digital Reading"
417 | host: Digital Humanities and the Americanist Seminar, Center for Cultural Analysis
418 | place: Rutgers University
419 | date: January 31, 2013
420 | -
421 | title: "Humanities Research with Digital Libraries"
422 | host: ITHAKA S+R and Jstor teams, ITHAKA building
423 | place: New York City
424 | date: April 16, 2012
425 | -
426 | title: "A History of Attention"
427 | host: Emily Harvey Foundation
428 | place: New York City
429 | date: March 17, 2012
430 | -
431 | title: "Bookworm"
432 | host: Beta Sprint Competition Selection, Digital Public Library of America Plenary Meeting
433 | place: Washington, DC
434 | date: October 21, 2011
435 |
436 | home_institution:
437 | -
438 | title: "The DH/CSS job market. Panelist."
439 | date: October 13, 2016
440 | -
441 | title: "What gender's got to do with teaching evaluations."
442 | place: "Conflict. Civility. Respect. Peace. Northeastern Reflects series on civic sustainability."
443 | date: November 4, 2015
444 | -
445 | title: "Open Access in the Digital Humanities"
446 | host: Open Access Week event, Northeastern University
447 | date: October 22, 2013
448 |
449 | conference:
450 | -
451 | title: "Two Volumes: the Lessons of Time on the Cross"
452 | host: American Historical Association
453 | place: Chicago
454 | date: January 2019
455 | -
456 | title: "What will the liberal arts look like in 10 years?"
457 | host: ITHAKA Next Wave Conference 2018
458 | place: New York City
459 | date: November 29, 2018
460 | -
461 | title: "Stable Random Projection: Universal, Minimal Dimensionality Reduction for Books"
462 | host: Digital Humanities 2017
463 | place: Montreal
464 | date: August 2017
465 |
466 | -
467 | title: "Drawing the frontier line at the US Census, 1870-1920"
468 | host: Columbia University
469 | place: New York
470 | date: April 8, 2017
471 |
472 | -
473 | title: A public exploratory data analysis of gender bias in teaching evaluations
474 | host: IEEEViz Workshop on Visualization for the Digital Humanities
475 | place: Baltimore
476 | date: October 24, 2016
477 | -
478 | title: "Invited presentation"
479 | host: Integration of education in the sciences, engineering, and medicine with the arts and humanities at the undergraduate and
480 | graduate levels
481 | place: National Academy of Sciences, Cambridge MA
482 | date: October 14, 2016
483 | -
484 | title: "Exploratory Narratives"
485 | host: Digital Humanities + Data Journalism conference
486 | place: University of Miami
487 | date: October 1, 2016
488 | -
489 | title: "Data Revisualization as Critical Humanities Practice: Reinterpreting 19th Century Data with Modern Tools"
490 | host: Digital Humanities 2015 Conference
491 | place: Sydney, Australia
492 | date: July 1, 2015
493 | twopage: true
494 | -
495 | title: "Historical data revisualization: Turner, Walker, and envisioning the frontier"
496 | host: Roundtable on data visualization and historical practice
497 | place: Annual Meeting of the American History Association
498 | date: January 3, 2015
499 | twopage: true
500 | -
501 | title: "Bookworm: Building an expressive grammar of humanities text analysis"
502 | host: The Digital Crucible
503 | place: Dartmouth College
504 | date: October 7, 2014
505 | -
506 | title: "Why we worry about humanities enrollments"
507 | host: Panel on responses to the American Academy Report on the Humanities
508 | place: National Conference on Public History; Monterey, California
509 | date: March 2014
510 | -
511 | title: "Transforming Texts into Cartesian Spaces"
512 | host: New Media in American Literary History symposium
513 | place: Northeastern University
514 | date: December 2013
515 | -
516 | title: "Reading texts with Big Metadata: the Bookworm platform for digital books, newspapers, and other libraries"
517 | host: Featured Talk, Boston Area Days of DH
518 | place: Northeastern University
519 | date: March 19, 2013
520 | -
521 | title: "Reading Genres: Exploring Massive Digital Collections From the Top Down"
522 | host: Big Data and Uncertainty in the Humanities
523 | place: University of Kansas
524 | date: September 22, 2012
525 | -
526 | title: "Paying Attention: A Case Study in Conceptual History with Millions of Texts"
527 | host: Panel on Digital Approaches to Conceptual History, 15th International Conference on the History of Concepts
528 | place: Helsinki, Finland
529 | date: August 24, 2012
530 | -
531 | title: "Drifting Metaphors: Using Digital Libraries to Describe Discursive Change"
532 | host: "Panel on Computational Approaches to Nineteenth-Century Literary History, Conference of the American Literature Association"
533 | place: San Francisco
534 | date: May 24, 2012
535 | -
536 | title: "Digital Collections and Research Libraries"
537 | host: "Research Libraries in the Digital Age: Needs and Opportunities Conference (invited presentation), American Antiquarian Society"
538 | place: Worcester, Massachusetts
539 | date: March 30, 2012
540 | -
541 | title: "A Conversation about Text Mining as a Research Method"
542 | host: Roundtable participant, Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association
543 | place: Chicago
544 | date: January 8, 2012
545 | -
546 | title: "Practicing Intellectual History on the Digital Archive"
547 | host: Paper, Modern America Workshop
548 | place: Princeton University
549 | date: March 2011
550 | -
551 | title: "The Rise of the American Attention Span, 1890-1935"
552 | host: Paper, Modern America Workshop
553 | place: Princeton University
554 | date: March 2010
555 |
556 | workshop:
557 |
558 | -
559 | title: Text Mining the Digital Library with Hathi Trust Extended Features
560 | place: NYC Week of DH
561 | date: January, 2020
562 | -
563 | title: Thinking Through Word Embeddings for the Humanities
564 | place: Carnegie Mellon University
565 | date: June, 2018
566 | -
567 | title: Thinking Through Word Embeddings for the Humanities
568 | place: NYC Week of DH
569 | date: January, 2018
570 | -
571 | title: Classification and the Library
572 | host: History Lab group
573 | place: Columbia University
574 | date: April 19, 2016
575 | -
576 | title: Text Analytics for Medical History (Instructor, NEH/NIH workshop)
577 | host: National Institutes of Health
578 | place: Bethesda, MD
579 | date: April 11, 2016
580 | -
581 | title: An Introduction to Text Analysis for Historians
582 | host: Digital History Workshop Sessions, Annual Meeting of the American Historical Association
583 | place: New York
584 | date: January 2, 2015
585 | -
586 | title: Global Literary Networks Work Retreat
587 | host: Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society
588 | place: University of Chicago
589 | date: December 4-5, 2014
590 | -
591 | title: 'Doing Digital History: A Graduate Student Workshop'
592 | place: University of Georgia
593 | date: April 21, 2014
594 | -
595 | title: "Digital Methods for conceptual history"
596 | host: International Research School in Conceptual History and Political Thought; two-day guest instructor
597 | place: Helsinki University
598 | date: August 2012
599 |
600 |
601 | teaching:
602 | -
603 | title: "Introduction to Programming"
604 | date: Fall 2020, Fall 2021
605 | type: Graduate
606 | -
607 | title: "The History of Big Data"
608 | date: Spring 2020, Fall 2021
609 | type: Undergraduate
610 | -
611 | title: "Working with Data"
612 | date: Spring 2020, Spring 2021, Spring 2022
613 | type: Graduate
614 | -
615 | title: "Asylum in Crisis. Co-taught with Sibylle Fischer and Ellen Noonan"
616 | date: Spring 2021
617 | type: Undergraduate
618 | -
619 | title: "Bostonography: Exploring the city through texts, maps, and networks. Co-taught with Ryan Cordell"
620 | date: Fall 2016
621 | type: Undergraduate
622 | -
623 | title: "United States History from 1607 to the present"
624 | date: Spring 2019; Fall 2017
625 | type: Undergraduate
626 | -
627 | title: "Texts, Maps, and Networks: Readings and Methods for Digital History"
628 | date: Fall 2015; Fall 2016; Fall 2017
629 | type: Graduate
630 | -
631 | title: "Humanities Data Analysis"
632 | date: Spring 2019; Spring 2015
633 | type: Graduate
634 | -
635 | title: "The Making of Modern America: The United States, 1877-1945"
636 | date: Fall 2014
637 | type: Undergraduate
638 | -
639 | title: "The History of Big Data"
640 | type: First Year Honors Seminar
641 | date: Fall 2013, Fall 2014
642 | -
643 | title: "History in the Digital Age"
644 | date: Spring 2014
645 | type: Undergraduate
646 | -
647 | title: "Introduction to Digital History"
648 | date: Fall 2013
649 | type: Graduate
650 |
651 | public_history:
652 | -
653 | role: Museum
654 | gigs:
655 | -
656 | item: American Whaling exhibits at the New Bedford Whaling Museum
657 | date: 2014-2015
658 | -
659 | item: Mapping the Frontier, Boston Public Library
660 | date: 2019
661 | -
662 | role: Language Consulting
663 | gigs:
664 |
665 | -
666 | item: "Historical Language Consultant, \"Masters of Sex,\" Season 2. Showtime Television."
667 | date: 2014
668 | -
669 | item: "Historical Language Consultant, \"Vegas,\" Season 1. Eye Productions/CBS television."
670 | date: 2012-2013
671 | -
672 | role: TV and Radio Appearances
673 | gigs:
674 | -
675 | item: Central Standard, KCUR Kansas City, "Is History Dying?"
676 | url: https://www.kcur.org/show/central-standard/2019-01-30/seg-1-is-history-dying-seg-2-the-marie-kondo-craze
677 | date: January 30, 2019
678 | -
679 | item: "\"Think\" with Krys Boyd, KERA Dallas. \"Go ahead, Major in Philosophy.\""
680 | url: "http://think.kera.org/2018/09/10/go-ahead-major-in-philosophy/"
681 | date: September 10, 2018
682 | -
683 | item: Morning Edition, National Public Radio. Discussing gendered language and teaching evaluations.
684 | url: "http://www.npr.org/blogs/ed/2015/02/23/386001328/how-we-talk-about-our-teachers"
685 | date: February 23, 2015
686 | -
687 | item: WBAL, Baltimore. Discussing the State of the Union Address.
688 | date: January 20, 2015
689 | -
690 | item: "New England Cable News. Discussing \"The Simpsons.\""
691 | date: September 2014
692 | -
693 | item: The Kojo Nnamdi Show, WAMU Washington DC. Hourlong guest discussing Digital Humanities.
694 | url: "http://thekojonnamdishow.org/shows/2013-02-19/digital-humanities"
695 | date: February 19, 2013
696 | -
697 | item: On the Media, National Public Radio. Discussing historical fiction and computational changes in language. (Version of Lexicon Valley interview, below).
698 | url: "http://www.onthemedia.org/2012/jun/15/lexicon-valley-takes-mad-men/"
699 | date: June 15, 2012
700 | -
701 | item: Lexicon Valley podcast, Slate.com.
702 | url: "http://www.slate.com/articles/podcasts/lexicon_valley/2012/06/lexicon_valley_anachronisms_in_mad_men_downton_abbey_and_edith_wharton_.html"
703 | date: June 11, 2012
704 | -
705 | item: Weekends with Alex Witt, MSNBC. Discussing Mad Men.
706 | date: March 24, 2012
707 |
708 | media_coverage:
709 | -
710 | fcitekey: miller\_is\_2015
711 | author: Miller, Clare Cain
712 | title: "Is the Professor Bossy or Brilliant? Much Depends on Gender"
713 | url: "http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/07/upshot/is-the-professor-bossy-or-brilliant-much-depends-on-gender.html?abt=0002&abg=1"
714 | journal: "*The New York Times*"
715 | date: February 6, 2015
716 | -
717 | fcitekey: dewey\_when\_2014
718 | author: "*Dewey, Caitlin*"
719 | title: "When F-Bombs Went Mainstream, Who Talks about Terrorism, and Other Surprising Cultural Insights from Big Data"
720 | url: "http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-intersect/wp/2014/09/18/when-f-bombs-went-mainstream-who-talks-about-terrorism-and-other-surprising-cultural-insights-from-big-data/"
721 | journal: "*The Washington Post*"
722 | date: September 18, 2014
723 | -
724 | fcitekey: hertzberg\_nobody\_2014
725 | author: Hertzberg, Hendrik
726 | title: "Nobody Said That Then!"
727 | url: "http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/hendrikhertzberg/2014/02/nobody-said-that-then-continued.html?intcid=obnetwork"
728 | journal: The New Yorker Blogs
729 | date: February 25, 2014
730 | -
731 | fcitekeyl: schuessler\_quants\_2013
732 | author: Schuessler, Jennifer
733 | title: "Quants Ask: What Crisis in the Humanities?"
734 | url: "http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/06/27/quants-ask-what-crisis-in-the-humanities/"
735 | journal: The New York Times
736 | date: June 27, 2013
737 | resume: true
738 |
739 | service:
740 | -
741 | type: "Service to the Profession"
742 | gigs:
743 | -
744 | item: Advisory board, "What Every1Says." Mellon Foundation-funded project on public discourse around the humanities.
745 | date: 2017–2019
746 | twopage: true
747 | -
748 | item: Working Group on Big Data and History, Social Science Resource Council
749 | date: 2015–2018
750 | twopage: false
751 | -
752 | item: Advisory Board, Culture Analytics
753 | date: 2015–Present
754 | twopage: true
755 | -
756 | item: Grant reviewer, National Endowment for the Humanities
757 | date: 2014, 2019
758 | -
759 | item: Digital Content Advisor, The American Yawp, Online History Textbook
760 | date: 2014–Present
761 | -
762 | item: Participant, Hathi Trust Research Center Un-Camp
763 | date: September 10-11, 2012
764 | -
765 | item: Invited Participant, Digital Public Library of America Technical Development Meeting
766 | date: December 2011
767 | -
768 | type: "Service to the Department and University"
769 | gigs:
770 | -
771 | item: DH Steering Committee
772 | date: 2019–present
773 | -
774 | item: Faculty Advisory Board, Research technology
775 | date: 2019–present
776 | -
777 | item: University committee on course evaluations
778 | date: 2020
779 | -
780 | item: Polonsky Fellowship Selection Committee
781 | date: 2020
782 | -
783 | item: Digital Humanities Seed Grant Committee, co-chair
784 | date: 2019–present
785 | -
786 | item: Committee on undergraduate research, College of Social Sciences and Humanities.
787 | date: 2016
788 | -
789 | item: Committee on experiential liberal arts, CSSH
790 | date: 2015
791 | -
792 | item: Graduate Committee, Northeastern University History Department
793 | date: 2014-16
794 | -
795 | item: Faculty Search Committee, Northeastern University
796 | date: 2015-16
797 | -
798 | item: Undergraduate Research Committee, Northeastern University College of Social Sciences and Humanities
799 | date: 2014
800 | -
801 | item: Committee on Digital Humanities Graduate Certificate
802 | date: 2015
803 | -
804 | item: Working Group on Evaluation of Digital Scholarship, Northeastern University
805 | date: 2015
806 | -
807 | item: Faculty Search Committee, Northeastern University
808 | date: 2014-15
809 | -
810 | item: Participant, Digital Working Group, Harvard History Department
811 | date: 2013
812 | -
813 | item: Departmental Representative, Princeton Graduate Student Government
814 | date: 2010–2011
815 | -
816 | item: Treasurer, Princeton Graduate History Association
817 | date: 2008-2010
818 | -
819 | item: Secretary, Princeton Graduate History Association
820 | date: 2006-2008
821 | -
822 | item: Director, Modern America Workshop, Princeton University
823 | date: 2007-2008
824 | software:
825 | -
826 | title: Bookworm
827 | language: Python
828 | url: github.com/Bookworm-project/BookwormDB
829 | description: Visualization and statistical analysis API for nonconsumptive analysis of massive textual
830 | corpora. Used by Hathi Trust Research Center, Yale University Digital Scholarship, Columbia History Lab, etc.
831 | -
832 | title: WordVectors
833 | language: R
834 | url: github.com/bmschmidt/wordVectors
835 | description: Widely used R package for creation and analysis of word2vec and other word embedding models.
836 | -
837 | title: Deepscatter
838 | language: Javascript/WebGL
839 | url: github.com/CreatingData/deepscatter
840 | description: Data tiling to display zoomable D3 scatterplots with tens of millions of items in browser.
841 | Used for work at Library of Congress, University of Tuebingen, Nomic Software.
842 |
843 |
844 | competencies:
845 | -
846 | type: Computing Platforms
847 | items:
848 | - "Substantial experience (could lead workshops): R, Python, Javascript, MySQL, D3."
849 | - "Research/collaborative use: HTML5/CSS, Unix administration, Haskell, ArcGIS/QGIS, perl, LaTex, JQuery."
850 | -
851 | type: Languages
852 | items: German (intermediate), Spanish (reading), French (reading).
853 |
854 | ...
855 |
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495 | sue for patent infringement). To "grant" such a patent license to a
496 | party means to make such an agreement or commitment not to enforce a
497 | patent against the party.
498 |
499 | If you convey a covered work, knowingly relying on a patent license,
500 | and the Corresponding Source of the work is not available for anyone
501 | to copy, free of charge and under the terms of this License, through a
502 | publicly available network server or other readily accessible means,
503 | then you must either (1) cause the Corresponding Source to be so
504 | available, or (2) arrange to deprive yourself of the benefit of the
505 | patent license for this particular work, or (3) arrange, in a manner
506 | consistent with the requirements of this License, to extend the patent
507 | license to downstream recipients. "Knowingly relying" means you have
508 | actual knowledge that, but for the patent license, your conveying the
509 | covered work in a country, or your recipient's use of the covered work
510 | in a country, would infringe one or more identifiable patents in that
511 | country that you have reason to believe are valid.
512 |
513 | If, pursuant to or in connection with a single transaction or
514 | arrangement, you convey, or propagate by procuring conveyance of, a
515 | covered work, and grant a patent license to some of the parties
516 | receiving the covered work authorizing them to use, propagate, modify
517 | or convey a specific copy of the covered work, then the patent license
518 | you grant is automatically extended to all recipients of the covered
519 | work and works based on it.
520 |
521 | A patent license is "discriminatory" if it does not include within
522 | the scope of its coverage, prohibits the exercise of, or is
523 | conditioned on the non-exercise of one or more of the rights that are
524 | specifically granted under this License. You may not convey a covered
525 | work if you are a party to an arrangement with a third party that is
526 | in the business of distributing software, under which you make payment
527 | to the third party based on the extent of your activity of conveying
528 | the work, and under which the third party grants, to any of the
529 | parties who would receive the covered work from you, a discriminatory
530 | patent license (a) in connection with copies of the covered work
531 | conveyed by you (or copies made from those copies), or (b) primarily
532 | for and in connection with specific products or compilations that
533 | contain the covered work, unless you entered into that arrangement,
534 | or that patent license was granted, prior to 28 March 2007.
535 |
536 | Nothing in this License shall be construed as excluding or limiting
537 | any implied license or other defenses to infringement that may
538 | otherwise be available to you under applicable patent law.
539 |
540 | 12. No Surrender of Others' Freedom.
541 |
542 | If conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or
543 | otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not
544 | excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot convey a
545 | covered work so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this
546 | License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may
547 | not convey it at all. For example, if you agree to terms that obligate you
548 | to collect a royalty for further conveying from those to whom you convey
549 | the Program, the only way you could satisfy both those terms and this
550 | License would be to refrain entirely from conveying the Program.
551 |
552 | 13. Use with the GNU Affero General Public License.
553 |
554 | Notwithstanding any other provision of this License, you have
555 | permission to link or combine any covered work with a work licensed
556 | under version 3 of the GNU Affero General Public License into a single
557 | combined work, and to convey the resulting work. The terms of this
558 | License will continue to apply to the part which is the covered work,
559 | but the special requirements of the GNU Affero General Public License,
560 | section 13, concerning interaction through a network will apply to the
561 | combination as such.
562 |
563 | 14. Revised Versions of this License.
564 |
565 | The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of
566 | the GNU General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will
567 | be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to
568 | address new problems or concerns.
569 |
570 | Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the
571 | Program specifies that a certain numbered version of the GNU General
572 | Public License "or any later version" applies to it, you have the
573 | option of following the terms and conditions either of that numbered
574 | version or of any later version published by the Free Software
575 | Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of the
576 | GNU General Public License, you may choose any version ever published
577 | by the Free Software Foundation.
578 |
579 | If the Program specifies that a proxy can decide which future
580 | versions of the GNU General Public License can be used, that proxy's
581 | public statement of acceptance of a version permanently authorizes you
582 | to choose that version for the Program.
583 |
584 | Later license versions may give you additional or different
585 | permissions. However, no additional obligations are imposed on any
586 | author or copyright holder as a result of your choosing to follow a
587 | later version.
588 |
589 | 15. Disclaimer of Warranty.
590 |
591 | THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY
592 | APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT
593 | HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY
594 | OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
595 | THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
596 | PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM
597 | IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF
598 | ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
599 |
600 | 16. Limitation of Liability.
601 |
602 | IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
603 | WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MODIFIES AND/OR CONVEYS
604 | THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY
605 | GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE
606 | USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF
607 | DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD
608 | PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS),
609 | EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
610 | SUCH DAMAGES.
611 |
612 | 17. Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16.
613 |
614 | If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided
615 | above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms,
616 | reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates
617 | an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the
618 | Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a
619 | copy of the Program in return for a fee.
620 |
621 | END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
622 |
623 | How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
624 |
625 | If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
626 | possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
627 | free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
628 |
629 | To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
630 | to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
631 | state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
632 | the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
633 |
634 | {one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.}
635 | Copyright (C) {year} {name of author}
636 |
637 | This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
638 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
639 | the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
640 | (at your option) any later version.
641 |
642 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
643 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
644 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
645 | GNU General Public License for more details.
646 |
647 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
648 | along with this program. If not, see .
649 |
650 | Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
651 |
652 | If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short
653 | notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode:
654 |
655 | {project} Copyright (C) {year} {fullname}
656 | This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
657 | This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
658 | under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
659 |
660 | The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
661 | parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands
662 | might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box".
663 |
664 | You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school,
665 | if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary.
666 | For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see
667 | .
668 |
669 | The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program
670 | into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you
671 | may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with
672 | the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
673 | Public License instead of this License. But first, please read
674 | .
675 |
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