Digital humanities

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Associated notions: humanities computing, cultural analytics, humanities 2.0.

Scholars

Events

Recurrent

One-off

Institutions, centres, labs, associations

Global

Europe

North America

Asia, Australia

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

  • Computer and the Humanities, *1966. Founding editor Joseph Raben. The official journal of ACH. From the start invested in computing in the fields such as literary theory, musicology, or art history. Renamed Language Resources and Evaluation in 2005 by the time it diverged away from humanities computing.
  • LLC: The Journal of Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, quarterly, *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, *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), *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, *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.

Monographs

  • Jess Bessinger, Stephen Parrish (eds.), Literary Data Processing Conference Proceedings, 1965. From 1964 conference held at Yorktown Heights. Papers discuss 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.
  • R.A. Wisbey (ed.), The Computer in Literary and Linguistic Research, 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.
  • S. Lusignan, J. S. North (eds.), Computing in the Humanities: Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Computing in the Humanities, Waterloo, Ontario: University of Waterloo Press, 1977.
  • 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.
  • Susan Schreibman, John Unsworth, Ray Siemens (eds.), A Companion to Digital Humanities, Oxford: Blackwell, 2004; new ed. as A New Companion to Digital Humanities, Oxford: Blackwell, (forthcoming 2015).
  • Willard McCarty, Humanities Computing, Palgrave Macmillan, 2005; new ed., rev., 2014. [6] 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.
  • 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. [7]
  • Anne Burdick, Johanna Drucker, Peter Lunenfeld, Todd Presner, Jeffrey Schnapp, Digital_Humanities, MIT Press, 2012, 176 pp.
  • 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. [8] [9]

Book series and editions

Special issues of journals

Selected book chapters, papers, articles, talks, blog posts and interviews

History of the field

Debates, surveys

Resources

Related

Spatial humanities, Digital geography, Spatial history, Interdisciplinary humanities, Multimodal publishing, Procedural humanities, Computational humanities.

See also

Software studies, Digital libraries, Classics

Links


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