Difference between revisions of "Digital humanities"
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* {{a|Drucker2009}} Johanna Drucker, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=562 SpecLab: Digital Aesthetics and Projects in Speculative Computing]'', University of Chicago Press, 2009, 264 pp. | * {{a|Drucker2009}} Johanna Drucker, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=562 SpecLab: Digital Aesthetics and Projects in Speculative Computing]'', University of Chicago Press, 2009, 264 pp. | ||
* Marilyn Deegan, Kathryn Sutherland (eds.), ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=640 Text Editing, Print and the Digital World]'', Ashgate, 2009, 205 pp. | * Marilyn Deegan, Kathryn Sutherland (eds.), ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=640 Text Editing, Print and the Digital World]'', Ashgate, 2009, 205 pp. | ||
− | * Domenico Fiormonte, Teresa Numerico, Francesca Tomasi, ''L'umanista digitale'', Bologna: Il Mulino, 2010, 240 pp. [http://www.mulino.it/isbn/9788815134257]. Reviews: [http://sci-hub. | + | * Domenico Fiormonte, Teresa Numerico, Francesca Tomasi, ''L'umanista digitale'', Bologna: Il Mulino, 2010, 240 pp. [http://www.mulino.it/isbn/9788815134257]. Reviews: [http://sci-hub.tw/10.1093/llc/fqr027 Robey] (Lit Linguist Computing 2011 EN), [http://diacronie.revues.org/2765 Bassi] (Diacronie 2012). {{it}} |
** ''[[Media:Fiormonte_Numerico_Tomasi_The_Digital_Humanist_A_Critical_Inquiry_2015.pdf|The Digital Humanist: A Critical Inquiry]]'', trans. Desmond Schmidt and Christopher Ferguson, Brooklyn, NY: Punctum Books, 2015, 260 pp, [https://archive.org/details/TheDigitalHumanist IA]. [http://punctumbooks.com/titles/the-digital-humanist/] | ** ''[[Media:Fiormonte_Numerico_Tomasi_The_Digital_Humanist_A_Critical_Inquiry_2015.pdf|The Digital Humanist: A Critical Inquiry]]'', trans. Desmond Schmidt and Christopher Ferguson, Brooklyn, NY: Punctum Books, 2015, 260 pp, [https://archive.org/details/TheDigitalHumanist IA]. [http://punctumbooks.com/titles/the-digital-humanist/] | ||
* Stephen Ramsay, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=7119 Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism]'', University of Illinois Press, 2011, 98 pp. | * Stephen Ramsay, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=7119 Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism]'', University of Illinois Press, 2011, 98 pp. | ||
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====Other==== | ====Other==== | ||
* Jeffrey T. Schnapp, ''[http://jeffreyschnapp.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/HH_lectures_Schnapp_01.pdf Knowledge Design: Incubating new knowledge forms / genres / spaces in the laboratory of the digital humanities]'', Hannover: Volkswagen Stiftung, 2014. Keynote delivered at the conference ''(Digital) Humanities Revisited – Challenges and Opportunities in the Digital Age''. | * Jeffrey T. Schnapp, ''[http://jeffreyschnapp.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/HH_lectures_Schnapp_01.pdf Knowledge Design: Incubating new knowledge forms / genres / spaces in the laboratory of the digital humanities]'', Hannover: Volkswagen Stiftung, 2014. Keynote delivered at the conference ''(Digital) Humanities Revisited – Challenges and Opportunities in the Digital Age''. | ||
− | * Quinn Dombrowski, [http://sci-hub. | + | * Quinn Dombrowski, [http://sci-hub.tw/10.1093/llc/fqu026 "What Ever Happened to Project Bamboo?"], ''Literary and Linguistic Computing'' 29:3, 1 Sep 2014, pp 326-339. |
===Early reports, surveys, conference proceedings and guidelines (1960s-90s)=== | ===Early reports, surveys, conference proceedings and guidelines (1960s-90s)=== | ||
* [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=11700 ''Almanacco Letterario Bompiani'': "Elettronica e letteratura"], ed. Sergio Morando, Milan: Bompiani, 1961, pp 87-188. {{it}} | * [http://monoskop.org/log/?p=11700 ''Almanacco Letterario Bompiani'': "Elettronica e letteratura"], ed. Sergio Morando, Milan: Bompiani, 1961, pp 87-188. {{it}} | ||
* ''Literary Data Processing Conference Proceedings'', eds. Jess Bessinger, Stephen Parrish and Harry F. Arader, White Plains, NY: IBM Corporation, 1965, 329 pp. Papers from a conference held at Yorktown Heights, 9-11 Sep 1954; discusses questions in encoding manuscript material and in automated sorting for concordances where both variant spellings and the lack of lemmatization are noted as serious impediments. | * ''Literary Data Processing Conference Proceedings'', eds. Jess Bessinger, Stephen Parrish and Harry F. Arader, White Plains, NY: IBM Corporation, 1965, 329 pp. Papers from a conference held at Yorktown Heights, 9-11 Sep 1954; discusses questions in encoding manuscript material and in automated sorting for concordances where both variant spellings and the lack of lemmatization are noted as serious impediments. | ||
− | * ''Computers for the Humanities? A Record of the Conference Sponsored by Yale University on a Grant from IBM, January 22-23, 1965'', Yale University Press, 1965, x+170 pp. Review: [http://www.jstor.org.secure.sci-hub. | + | * ''Computers for the Humanities? A Record of the Conference Sponsored by Yale University on a Grant from IBM, January 22-23, 1965'', Yale University Press, 1965, x+170 pp. Review: [http://www.jstor.org.secure.sci-hub.tw/stable/30199196 Leed] (Comp Hum 1966). |
* ''The Computer and Literary Style: Introductory Essays and Studies'', ed. Jacob Leed, Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1966, 179 pp. | * ''The Computer and Literary Style: Introductory Essays and Studies'', ed. Jacob Leed, Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1966, 179 pp. | ||
* ''Computers in Humanistic Research: Readings and Perspectives'', ed. Edmund A. Bowles, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1967, xi+264 pp. | * ''Computers in Humanistic Research: Readings and Perspectives'', ed. Edmund A. Bowles, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1967, xi+264 pp. |
Revision as of 14:48, 10 December 2017
Associated notions: humanities computing, cultural analytics, humanities 2.0.
Contents
Scholars
- Roger Bagnall
- David M. Berry
- Clare Birchall
- Rens Bod
- Roberto Busa
- Dan Cohen
- Patrick Conner
- Gregory Crane
- Johanna Drucker
- Alex Gil
- Michael A. Keller
- Matthew G. Kirschenbaum
- Donna Kurtz
- Ian Lancashire
- Alan Liu
- Peter Lunenfeld
- Laura Mandell
- Willard McCarty
- Josephine Miles
- Jonathan Moffett
- Wilhelm Ott
- Joseph Raben
- Peter Robinson
- Geoffrey Rockwell
- John Unsworth
- Roy Wisbey
Events
Recurrent
- ALLC conference, Cambridge, 1970; Edinburgh, 1972; Cardiff, 1974; Oxford, 1976; Birmingham, 1978; Cambridge, 1980; until 1988.
- Kolloquium über die Anwendung der Elektronischen Datenverarbeitung in den Geisteswissenschaften, U Tübingen, est. 1973. Held three times a year, organised by Wilhelm Ott.
- International Conference on Computing in the Humanities (ICCH), From the mid-1970s until 1987. A series held in the US (and Canada) biennially to alternate with the British CLLR meetings.
- International Conference of Computing and Philosophy (IACAP), est. 1986.
- Digital Humanities conferences, est. 1989. Organised by ADHO. Before the founding of ADHO in 2006, it was the joint conference of ACH and ALLC held annually with the venue alternating between Europe and North America.
- Digital Humanities Summer Institute, U Victoria, est. 2001.
- HASTAC conferences, est. 2007.
- THATCamp, The Humanities and Technology Camp, est. 2010. Year-long unconferences organised internationally.
- JADH conferences, est. 2011.
- Digital Humanities Australasia, est. 2012. Organised biennally by aaDH.
- Digital Humanities Benelux, est. 2014. Annual conference.
One-off
- Literary Data Processing Conference, Yorktown Heights, 1964. Organised by IBM.
- The Computational Turn workshop, Swansea U, Mar 2010.
- Online Humanities Scholarship: The Shape of Things to Come, Mar 2010. A Mellon Foundation conference at U Virginia.
- Google’s Digital Humanities Research Awards gives $1 million to 12 university DH research groups, Jul 2010. NYT coverage.
- (Digital) Humanities Revisited – Challenges and Opportunities in the Digital Age, Herrenhausen Palace, Hannover, Dec 2013. Organised by Volkswagen Stiftung.
- Göttingen Dialog for Digital Humanities series, GCDH Göttingen, Apr-Jul 2015.
- Transformative Digital Humanities Conference and THATCamp, University of Maryland College Park, 2-3 Oct 2015.
Institutions, centres, labs, associations
Global
- Association for Computers and the Humanities (ACH), est. 1978. Grew out of the ICCH conference. Member of ADHO.
- Text Encoding Initiative (TEI), est. 1987. A consortium developing methods for encoding humanities data in electronic form. As of May 2015 has 68 institutional members [1].
- International Association for Computing and Philosophy (IACAP), est. 2004. Conferences devoted to CAP are being held since 1986 [2].
- Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO). Founded in 2006 by ALLC, ACH and SDH/SEMI. Members: EADH, ACH, CSDH/SCHN, centerNet, aaDH, JADH.
- centerNet, est. 2007. An international network of about 100 digital humanities centers in 19 countries. Developed from a meeting hosted by NEH. Member of ADHO.
Europe
- Centre for Literary and Linguistic Computing (CLLC), Cambridge, est. 1963. Founded by Roy Wisbey as support for his work with Early Middle High German texts. Later transformed into ALLC.
- European Association for Digital Humanities (EADH), est. 1973. Before 2012 called the Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing (ALLC), and before that CLLC. Originated at King's College London. Member of ADHO.
- Zentrum für Datenverarbeitung [Computing Center], U Tübingen, est. 1973. Vice-director Wilhelm Ott (1973-2003).
- Uni Digital, U Bergen. Formerly Humanistisk Datasenter (HIT) / Norwegian Computing Center for the Humanities (NCCH) [3].
- Department of Digital Humanities at King's College London, est. 1991. Formerly the Centre for Computing in the Humanities.
- Department of Humanistic Informatics (Humanistisk informatikk), U Bergen. Co-founded by Espen Aarseth. [4]
- Humanities Advanced Technology and Information Institute, U Glasgow, Scotland, est. 1997.
- Institute for Textual Scholarship and Electronic Editing (ITSEE), U Birmingham, est. c2005.
- Oxford e-Research Centre, U Oxford, est. 2006.
- Platform Digital Humanities at U Antwerp. Initiated by Thomas Crombez in 2010.
- UCL Centre for Digital Humanities, U College London, est. 2010. Dir. Melissa Terras.
- Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities (GCDH), Georg-August U Göttingen, est. 2010.
- An Foras Feasa, The Institute for Research in Irish Historical and Cultural Traditions, National U Ireland, Maynooth, est. c2011.
- Centre for Digital Humanities, a collaboration between U Amsterdam, VU Amsterdam and the Royal Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW); est. 2011.
- Digital Arts and Humanities at U College Cork, est. 2011. Dir. Orla Murphy.
- Minka Lab, Cologne, est. 2014.
- Sussex Humanities Lab, U Sussex, Brighton, est. Jan 2015. Houses Digital Humanities Lab. Dir. Caroline Bassett.
- Digital Humanities Flanders (DHuF), est. c2015. Spokesperson: Dirk van Hulle. [5]
- Digital Humanities at KU Leuven. Head: Barbara Bordalejo.
- Digital Humanities Lab Denmark (DIGHUMLAB), a national consortium of four universities and two libraries in Denmark. Based at Aarhus University.
North America
- Institute for Computer Research in the Humanities (ICRH) at New York University, est. c1963 (formally 3/1965). Est. by Alice Pollin and Jack Heller. Ceased its activities in 1969 due to lack of funding. [6]
- Centre for Computing in the Humanities (CCH), U Toronto, est. 1986. Est. by Ian Lancashire; with support from IBM Canada. In 1996 merged into CHASS.
- Computing in the Humanities and Social Sciences (CHASS), U Toronto. Created in 1996 by merging the EPAS Computing Facility and the Centre for Computing in the Humanities, which had been separately serving social sciences and humanities disciplines at the university [7].
- Canadian Society for Digital Humanities / Société canadienne des humanités numériques (CSDH/SCHN), est. 1986. Formerly Consortium for Computers in the Humanities / Consortium pour ordinateurs en sciences humaines (SDH/SEMI). Member of ADHO.
- Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, U Virginia, est. 1992. Dir. Worthy Martin and Daniel Pitti.
- Center for Computer Analysis of Texts (CCAT), U Pennsylvania, est. c1993.
- Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason U, Virginia, est. 1994.
- Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities, est. 1999.
- Speculative Computing Laboratory (SpecLab), U Virginia, c2000-03. Ran by Johanna Drucker, Jerome McGann, Bethany Nowviskie, et al. See Drucker 2009 and Nowviskie 2004.
- HASTAC (Humanities, Arts, Science and Technology Alliance and Collaboratory) network, founded in 2002 by Cathy N. Davidson (Duke U) and David Theo Goldberg (U California). Funded by the MacArthur Foundation Digital Media and Learning Competition.
- Office of Digital Humanities, est. 2006. Before 2008 the Digital Humanities Initiative. Launched by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH).
- Institute for Digital Arts & Humanities at Indiana U (IDAH), Bloomington, est. 2007. Dir. Ellen MacKay.
- Center for Public History and Digital Humanities, Cleveland State U, est. 2008.
- metaLAB (at) Harvard, est. 2010. Harvard U's "knowledge design" studio at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society. Dir. Jeffrey Schnapp.
- Initiative for Digital Humanities, Media, and Culture, Texas A&M U, est. c2010.
- Electronic Textual Cultures Lab, U Victoria, Canada.
- Digital Humanities at Fordham U New York, an informal working group.
- UVic Maker Lab in the Humanities at U Victoria, est. Sep 2012.
- Center for Digital Humanities, Princeton U Library, est. 2014.
- Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis (CESTA) at Stanford U. Dir. Zephyr Frank.
- Critical Making Lab at U Toronto.
- Deep Lab at Carnegie Mellon U, est. Dec 2014.
- Digital Humanities Lab at Yale U (DHLab), est. 2015. Dir. Peter Leonard.
- Price Lab for Digital Humanities at U Pennsylvania, est. 2015. Dir. Jim English.
- Digital Arts & Humanities at Harvard U, Cambridge/MA, (DARTH).
- Digital Humanities Center (DHC), U Columbia, New York. Coordinated by Alex Gil.
Asia, Australia
- Australasian Association for Digital Humanities (aaDH), est. 2011. Member of ADHO.
- Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (JADH), est. 2011. Joined ADHO in 2013.
- Digital Humanities Research Group at U Western Sydney, est. 2012.
Mailing lists
- Ansaxnet, the oldest electronic discussion list for the humanities. Founded by Patrick Conner in 1986.
- Humanist. Started in May 1987 following the ICCH conference in Columbia, South Carolina. Founding editor Willard McCarty. Publication of ADHO and the Office for Humanities Communication (OHC), and an affiliated publication of the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS). Welcoming message. Search.
Literature
Journals
- Newsletter of Computer Archaeology, est. 1965. Founding editor Robert G. Chenhall.
- Computers and the Humanities, Sep 1966-Nov 2004. Founding editor Joseph Raben. The official journal of ACH. From the start invested in computing in the fields such as literary theory, musicology, and art history. Renamed Language Resources and Evaluation in 2005 by the time it diverged away from humanities computing. [8]
- LLC: The Journal of Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, quarterly, est. 1986. Formerly Literary and Linguistic Computing. OA option for authors. The main print publication of ALLC. Published by Oxford University Press. Edited by Edward Vanhoutte.
- Southern Spaces, est. 2004. OA. Published by the Emory University Libraries, ed. Allen Tullos.
- Digital Medievalist. First issue in 2005. OA. Hosted at the University of Lethbridge, Canada, ed. Malte Rehbein.
- Digital Humanities Quarterly (DHQ), est. 2007. OA. Published by ADHO, ed. Julia Flanders, Brown U.
- Digital Studies / Le champ numérique, First volume in 2009. Published by CSDH/SCHN, in partnership with ADHO. Rptd. issues, 1992-2008.
- Journal of Digital Humanities, est. 2011. OA. Initiated by the PressForward project, produced by the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media. Ed. Daniel J. Cohen (2012-13), currently Lisa M. Rhody, Joan Fragaszy Troyano and Stephanie Westcott.
Textbooks
- Chris Manning, Hinrich Schütze, Foundations of Statistical Natural Language Processing, MIT Press, 1999.
- Christopher D. Manning, Prabhakar Raghavan, Hinrich Schütze, Introduction to Information Retrieval, Cambridge University Press, 2008.
- Ian H. Witten, Eibe Frank, Mark A. Hall, Data Mining: Practical Machine Learning Tools and Techniques, 3rd ed., Morgan Kaufmann, 2011. Book website. A companion book for the Weka software.
- Kevin Patrick Murphy, Machine Learning: a Probabilistic Perspective, MIT Press, 2012, 1104 pp. Book website.
- Eileen Gardiner, Ronald G. Musto, The Digital Humanities: A Primer for Students and Scholars, Cambridge University Press, 2015.
Monographs
- Susan Schreibman, John Unsworth, Ray Siemens (eds.), A Companion to Digital Humanities, Oxford: Blackwell, 2004; 2nd ed. as A New Companion to Digital Humanities, Oxford: Blackwell, 2016, 586 pp. [9]
- Willard McCarty, Humanities Computing, Palgrave Macmillan, 2005; new ed., rev., 2014. [10] Review: Drucker (2007).
- Johanna Drucker, SpecLab: Digital Aesthetics and Projects in Speculative Computing, University of Chicago Press, 2009, 264 pp.
- Marilyn Deegan, Kathryn Sutherland (eds.), Text Editing, Print and the Digital World, Ashgate, 2009, 205 pp.
- Domenico Fiormonte, Teresa Numerico, Francesca Tomasi, L'umanista digitale, Bologna: Il Mulino, 2010, 240 pp. [11]. Reviews: Robey (Lit Linguist Computing 2011 EN), Bassi (Diacronie 2012). (Italian)
- The Digital Humanist: A Critical Inquiry, trans. Desmond Schmidt and Christopher Ferguson, Brooklyn, NY: Punctum Books, 2015, 260 pp, IA. [12]
- Stephen Ramsay, Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism, University of Illinois Press, 2011, 98 pp.
- Matthew Gold (ed.), Debates in the Digital Humanities, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2012, 516 pp.
- David M. Berry (ed.), Understanding Digital Humanities, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012. [13]
- Anne Burdick, Johanna Drucker, Peter Lunenfeld, Todd Presner, Jeffrey Schnapp, Digital_Humanities, MIT Press, 2012, 176 pp.
- Daniel J. Cohen, Tom Scheinfeldt (eds.), Hacking the Academy: New Approaches to Scholarship and Teaching from Digital Humanities, University of Michigan Press, 2013.
- N. Katherine Hayles, Jessica Pressman (eds.), Comparative Textual Media: Transforming the Humanities in the Postprint Era, University of Minnesota Press, 2013.
- Ray Siemens, Susan Schreibman (eds.), A Companion to Digital Literary Studies, Wiley-Blackwell, 2013, xx+620 pp.
- Richard Rogers, Digital Methods, MIT Press, 2013.
- Clare Mills, Michael Pidd, Esther Ward (eds.), Proceedings of the Digital Humanities Congress 2012, Sheffield: HRI Online Publications, 2014.
- Critical Keywords for the Digital Humanities, Lüneburg: Centre of Digital Cultures, Leuphana University, 2014.
- Paul Longley Arthur, Katherine Bode (eds.), Advancing Digital Humanities: Research, Methods, Theories, Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, 352 pp. [14] [15]
- Matthew K. Gold, Lauren F. Klein (eds.), Debates in the Digital Humanities 2016, University of Minnesota Press, 2016, 600 pp. Review: Zilberg (Leonardo).
- Roberto Simanowski (ed.), Digital Humanities and Digital Media: Conversations on Politics, Culture, Aesthetics and Literacy, Open Humanities Press, 2016.
- David M. Berry, Anders Fagerjord, Digital Humanities: Knowledge and Critique in a Digital Age, Polity, 2017, 248 pp. [16]
- Jentery Sayers (ed.), Making Humanities Matter, University of Minnesota Press, forthcoming 2017. TOC.
- Tara McPherson, Feminist in a Software Lab: Difference + Design, Harvard University Press, 2018, 280 pp. [17]
- Book series
- Digital Humanities series of Digital Culture Books, University of Michigan Press, est. 2013. Eds. Julie Thompson Klein, Tara MacPherson and Paul Conway.
- Debates in the Digital Humanities series, University of Minnesota Press. Eds. Matthew K. Gold and Lauren Klein.
Special issues of journals
- Culture Machine 12: "The Digital Humanities: Beyond Computing", ed. Federica Frabetti, Open Humanities Press, 2011.
- Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung 37:3 (141): "Controversies around the Digital Humanities", 2012. [18]
- Differences 25(1): "In the Shadows of the Digital Humanities", eds. Ellen Rooney and Elizabeth Weed, 2014. [19]
Selected book chapters, articles, talks and interviews
History of the field
- Willard McCarty, "Humanities Computing", in Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science, 2nd ed., eds. Marcia J. Bates and Mary Niles Maack, New York: M. Dekker, 2003, pp 1224-1235.
- Susan Hockey, "The History of Humanities Computing", in A Companion to Digital Humanities, eds. Schreibman, Unsworth, and Siemens, Blackwell, 2004.
- Patrik Svensson, "Humanities computing as digital humanities", Digital Humanities Quarterly 3:3 (2009). Analysis of humanities computing as a field prior and contemporarenous to the digital humanities.
- Sean Gouglas, et al., "Before the Beginning: The Formation of Humanities Computing as a Discipline in Canada", Digital Studies 3:1 (2012).
- Joris van Zundert, Karina van Dalen-Oskam, "Digital Humanities in the Netherlands", H-Soz-Kult, 28 Oct 2014. [20]
- Daniel Allington, Sarah Brouillette, David Golumbia, "Neoliberal Tools (and Archives): A Political History of Digital Humanities", Los Angeles Review of Books, 1 May 2016.
Reflections and surveys of the field
- Roberto A. Busa, "Foreword: Perspectives on the Digital Humanities", in A Companion to Digital Humanities, eds. Susan Schreibman, Ray Siemens and John Unsworth, Oxford: Blackwell, 2004, pp xvi-xxi. Busa is often cited as the pioneer of both humanities computing and digital humanities; his work dates back to the late 1940s: "During the World War II, between 1941 and 1946, I began to look for machines for the automation of the linguistic analysis of written texts. I found them, in 1949, at IBM in New York City."
- Kathleen Smith, "Q&A With Brett Bobley, Director of the NEH’s Office of the Digital Humanities", HASTAC blogs, 1 Feb 2009.
- "The Future of the Digital Humanities", Feb 2009. Discussion hosted by HASTAC Scholars Michael Gavin and Kathleen Smith.
- Tara McPherson, "Introduction: Media Studies and the Digital Humanities", Cinema Journal 48:2 (Winter 2009), pp 119-123. Suggests a typology for the digital humanities that makes distinctions between the computing humanities, blogging humanities and multimodal humanities. The computing humanities focus on building tools, infrastructure, standards and collections whereas the blogging humanities are concerned with the production of networked media and peer-to-peer writing. The multimodal humanities bring together scholarly tools, databases, networked writing and peer-to-peer commentary while also leveraging the potential of the visual and aural media that are part of contemporary life. [21]
- "How do you define Humanities Computing / Digital Humanities?", Tapor, 2009-2011. Three surveys.
- Matthew G. Kirschenbaum, "What is Digital Humanities and What's it Doing in English Departments?", ADE Bulletin 150 (2010), pp 55-61. Originally written for presentation at the ADE Summer Seminar East at U Maryland in Jun 2010.
- "Manifeste des Digital humanities", Jul 2010. (French) Issued by the participants of THATCamp in Paris.
- "Manifesto for the Digital Humanities", Jul 2010.
- Patrik Svensson, "The Landscape of Digital Humanities", Digital Humanities Quarterly 4:1 (Summer 2010).
- Chris Forster, "I’m Chris. Where Am I Wrong?", HASTAC blogs, 8 Sep 2010.
- Elijah Meeks, "The Digital Humanities as Imagined Community", Digital Humanities Specialist blog, 14 September 2010.
- David M. Berry, "The Computational Turn: Thinking About the Digital Humanities", Culture Machine 12 (2011), Open Humanities Press.
- Gary Hall, "On the limits of openness V: there are no digital humanities", in Media Gifts, 2011; later as "There Are No Digital Humanities", in Debates in the Digital Humanities, ed. Matthew Gold, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2012.
- Alan Liu, "Where Is Cultural Criticism in the Digital Humanities?", in Debates in the Digital Humanities, ed. Matthew K. Gold, University of Minnesota Press, 2012, pp 490-509. First given as a paper at the panel on "The History and Future of the Digital Humanities" at Modern Language Association convention, Los Angeles, 7 Jan 2011. [22]
- Domenico Fiormonte, "Towards a Cultural Critique of the Digital Humanities", Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung 37:3 (141): "Controversies around the Digital Humanities", 2012, pp 59-76. [23]
- Wendy Hui Kyong Chun, "The Dark Side of the Digital Humanities", Jan 2013. A talk given on 4 Jan 2013.
- Johanna Drucker, "Digital Humanities: From Speculative to Skeptical", Concordia U, 9 Oct 2015. Audio recording of the talk.
- Florian Cramer, "Post-Digital Literary Studies", 16 Jul 2015.
- Miriam Posner, "What's Next: The Radical, Unrealized Potential of Digital Humanities", 27 Jul 2015. Edited keynote given at the Keystone Digital Humanities Conference at U Pennsylvania on 22 Jul 2015.
- Gosia Stergios, "A Review of Selected Digital Humanities Centers and Initiatives", DARTH, Mar 2016.
- Melissa Dinsman, "The Digital in the Humanities: A Special Interview Series", Los Angeles Review of Books, Mar-Aug 2016. Interviews with Franco Moretti, Alexander Galloway, Laura Mandell, Richard Jean So, Bethany Nowviskie, Marisa Parham, Pamela Fletcher, David Golumbia, Sharon M. Leon, Jessica Marie Johnson, Ted Underwood, Richard Grusin.
- Whitney Trettien, "Creative Destruction / “Digital Humanities”", Medium, 24 Aug 2016.
Other
- Jeffrey T. Schnapp, Knowledge Design: Incubating new knowledge forms / genres / spaces in the laboratory of the digital humanities, Hannover: Volkswagen Stiftung, 2014. Keynote delivered at the conference (Digital) Humanities Revisited – Challenges and Opportunities in the Digital Age.
- Quinn Dombrowski, "What Ever Happened to Project Bamboo?", Literary and Linguistic Computing 29:3, 1 Sep 2014, pp 326-339.
Early reports, surveys, conference proceedings and guidelines (1960s-90s)
- Almanacco Letterario Bompiani: "Elettronica e letteratura", ed. Sergio Morando, Milan: Bompiani, 1961, pp 87-188. (Italian)
- Literary Data Processing Conference Proceedings, eds. Jess Bessinger, Stephen Parrish and Harry F. Arader, White Plains, NY: IBM Corporation, 1965, 329 pp. Papers from a conference held at Yorktown Heights, 9-11 Sep 1954; discusses questions in encoding manuscript material and in automated sorting for concordances where both variant spellings and the lack of lemmatization are noted as serious impediments.
- Computers for the Humanities? A Record of the Conference Sponsored by Yale University on a Grant from IBM, January 22-23, 1965, Yale University Press, 1965, x+170 pp. Review: Leed (Comp Hum 1966).
- The Computer and Literary Style: Introductory Essays and Studies, ed. Jacob Leed, Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1966, 179 pp.
- Computers in Humanistic Research: Readings and Perspectives, ed. Edmund A. Bowles, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1967, xi+264 pp.
- Kenneth Janda, "Computer Applications in Political Science", in AFIPS '67 (Fall) Proceedings of the November 14-16, 1967, Fall Joint Computer Conference, 1967, pp 339-345.
- Everett Ellin, "An International Survey of Museum Computer Activity", Computers and the Humanities 3:2, Nov 1968, pp 65-86.
- The Computer in Literary and Linguistic Research, ed. R.A. Wisbey, Cambridge University Press, 1971, 309 pp. Proceedings from a conference organised by Roy Wisbey and Michael Farringdon at the University of Cambridge in March 1970. Papers deal with the issues such as input, output, programming, lexicography, textual editing, language teaching, and stylistics.
- Computer Applications & Quantitative Methods in Archaeology Proceedings, 1973-2011.
- Computer-Assisted Research in the Humanities: A Directory of Scholars Active, ed. Joseph Raben, Pergamen Press, 1977, 251 pp.
- Computing in the Humanities: Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Computing in the Humanities, eds. S. Lusignan and J. S. North, Waterloo, Ontario: University of Waterloo Press, 1977.
- Roberto Busa, "The Annals of Humanities Computing: The Index Thomisticus", Computers and the Humanities 14 (1980), pp 83-90.
- Ian Lancashire, Willard McCarty (eds.), Humanities Computing Yearbook, 2 vols., Oxford University Press, 1988-90, 408+720 pp. Bibliography of projects, software, and publications.
- Text Encoding Initiative, Guidelines for Electronic Text Encoding and Interchange, 1994. The first systematic attempt to categorize and define all the features within humanities texts that might interest scholars.
- David Bearman (ed.), Research Agenda for Networked Cultural Heritage, Santa Monica, CA: Getty Art History Information Program, 1996.
Resources
- Digital Humanities Now.
- #transformDH, "an academic guerrilla movement seeking to (re)define capital-letter Digital Humanities as a force for transformative scholarship by collecting, sharing, and highlighting projects that push at its boundaries and work for social justice, accessibility, and inclusion."
- Postcolonial Digital Humanities, founded and run by Adeline Koh and Roopika Risam.
- PressForward, an experiment in sourcing, evaluating, publishing, and crediting scholarly communication from the open web.
- Interviews on the Digital Humanities. N. Katherine Hayles interviews 18 scholars. Audio.
- Black Digital Humanities Projects & Resources.
- Syllabi
- Introduction to Digital Humanities course by Johanna Drucker (with David Kim), UCLA, 2011-12. The page contains an online course book and related collection of resources.
- Art, Writing, Technology: New Approaches to the Digital Humanities, Northwestern U, 2016. Course syllabus by Daniel Snelson.
Related
Spatial humanities, Digital geography, Spatial history, Interdisciplinary humanities, Multimodal publishing, Procedural humanities, Computational humanities.
See also
Software studies, Digital libraries, Classics
Links