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Debates in the Digital Humanities 2023 [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 520 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 254x178x19 mm, kaal: 907 g, 14 black and white illustrations
  • Sari: Debates in the Digital Humanities
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jul-2023
  • Kirjastus: University of Minnesota Press
  • ISBN-10: 1517915287
  • ISBN-13: 9781517915285
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 520 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 254x178x19 mm, kaal: 907 g, 14 black and white illustrations
  • Sari: Debates in the Digital Humanities
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jul-2023
  • Kirjastus: University of Minnesota Press
  • ISBN-10: 1517915287
  • ISBN-13: 9781517915285
A cutting-edge view of the digital humanities at a time of global pandemic, catastrophe, and uncertainty

Where do the digital humanities stand in 2023? Debates in the Digital Humanities 2023 presents a state-of-the-field vision of digital humanities amid rising social, political, economic, and environmental crises; a global pandemic; and the deepening of austerity regimes in U.S. higher education. Providing a look not just at where DH stands but also where it is going, this fourth volume in the Debates in the Digital Humanities series features both established scholars and emerging voices pushing the fields boundaries, asking thorny questions, and providing space for practitioners to bring to the fore their research and their hopes for future directions in the field. Carrying forward the themes of political and social engagement present in the series throughout, it includes crucial contributions to the field-from a vital forum centered on the voices of Black women scholars, manifestos from feminist and Latinx perspectives on data and DH, and a consideration of Indigenous data and artificial intelligence, to essays that range across topics such as the relation of DH to critical race theory, capital, and accessibility.

Contributors: Harmony Bench, Ohio State U; Christina Boyles, Michigan State U; Megan R. Brett, George Mason U; Michelle Lee Brown, Washington State U; Patrick J. Burns, New York U; Kent K. Chang, U of California, Berkeley; Rico Devara Chapman, Clark Atlanta U; Marika Cifor, U of Washington; MarÍa Eugenia Cotera, U of Texas; T. L. Cowan, U of Toronto; Marlene L. Daut, U of Virginia; Quinn Dombrowski, Stanford U; Kate Elswit, U of London; Nishani Frazier, U of Kansas; Kim Gallon, Brown U; Patricia Garcia, U of Michigan; Lorena Gauthereau, U of Houston; Masoud Ghorbaninejad, University of Victoria; Abraham Gibson, U of Texas at San Antonio; Nathan P. Gibson, Ludwig-Maximilians-UniversitÄt, Munich; Kaiama L. Glover, Barnard College; Hilary N. Green, Davidson College; Jo Guldi, Southern Methodist U; Matthew N. Hannah, Purdue U Libraries; Jeanelle Horcasitas, DigitalOcean; Christy Hyman, Mississippi State U; Arun Jacob, U of Toronto; Jessica Marie Johnson, Johns Hopkins U and Harvard U; Martha S. Jones, Johns Hopkins U; Annette K. Joseph-Gabriel, Duke U; Mills Kelly, George Mason U; Spencer D. C. Keralis, Digital Frontiers; Zoe LeBlanc, U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Jason Edward Lewis, Concordia U; James Malazita, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Alison Martin, Dartmouth College; Linda GarcÍa Merchant, U of Houston Libraries; Rafia Mirza, Southern Methodist U; Mame-Fatou Niang, Carnegie Mellon U; Jessica Marie Otis, George Mason U; Marisa Parham, U of Maryland; Andrew Boyles Petersen, Michigan State U Libraries; Emily Pugh, Getty Research Institute; Olivia Quintanilla, UC Santa Barbara; Jasmine Rault, U of Toronto Scarborough; Anastasia Salter, U of Central Florida; Maura Seale, U of Michigan; Celeste Tng Vy Sharpe, Normandale Community College; Astrid J. Smith, Stanford U Libraries; Maboula Soumahoro, U of Tours; Mel Stanfill, U of Central Florida; Tonia Sutherland, U of Hawaii at Mnoa; Gabriela Baeza Ventura, U of Houston; Carolina Villarroel, U of Houston; Melanie Walsh, U of Washington; Hmi Whaanga, U of Waikato; Bridget Whearty, Binghamton U; Jeri Wieringa, U of Alabama; David Joseph Wrisley, NYU Abu Dhabi.





Cover alt text: A text-based cover with the main title repeating right-side up and upside down. The leftmost iteration appears in black ink; all others are white.

Arvustused

"Debates in the Digital Humanities 2023 is a brilliant collection of provocative essays by many of our moments richest thinkers and doers in the fields of Black, Latinx, Indigenous, queer, and multilingual digital humanities. As a collective call to action, this volume is an essential read for anyone who wants to understand the purpose of the humanities today."-Jim Casey and Gabrielle Foreman, co-directors, Colored Conventions Project

 

Introduction: The Digital Humanities, Moment to Moment ix
Matthew K. Gold
Lauren F. Klein
PART I Openings and Interventions
1(90)
1 Toward a Political Economy of Digital Humanities
1(26)
Matthew N. Hannah
2 All the Work You Do Not See: Labor, Digitizers, and the Foundations of Digital Humanities
27(20)
Astrid J. Smith
Bridget Whearty
3 Right-to-Left (RTL) Text: Digital Humanists Plus Half a Billion Users
47(27)
Masoud Ghorbaninejad
Nathan P. Gibson
David Joseph Wrisley
4 Relation-Oriented AI: Why Indigenous Protocols Matter for the Digital Humanities
74(10)
Michelle Lee Brown
Hemi Whaanga
Jason Edward Lewis
5 A U.S. Latinx Digital Humanities Manifesto
84(7)
Gabriela Baeza Ventura
Maria Eugenia Cotera
Linda Garcia Merchant
Lorena Gauthereau
Carolina Villarroel
PART II Theories and Approaches
91(100)
6 The Body Is Not (Only) a Metaphor: Rethinking Embodiment in DH
93(12)
Harmony Bench
Kate Elswit
7 The Queer Gap in Cultural Analytics
105(15)
Kent K. Chang
8 The Feminist Data Manifest-NO: An Introduction and Four Reflections
120(20)
Tonia Sutherland
Marika Cifor
T. L. Cowan
Jas Rault
Patricia Garcia
9 Black Is Not the Absence of Light: Restoring Black Visibility and Liberation to Digital Humanities
140(26)
Nishani Frazier
Christy Hyman
Hilary N. Green
10 Digital Humanities in the Deepfake Era
166(10)
Abraham Gibson
11 Operationalizing Surveillance Studies in the Digital Humanities
176(15)
Christina Boyles
Andrew Boyles Petersen
Arun Jacob
PART III Disciplines and Institutions
191(82)
12 A Voice Interrupts: Digital Humanities as a Tool to Hear Black Life
193(9)
Alison Martin
13 Addressing an Emergency: The "Pragmatic Tilt" Required of Scholarship, Data, and Design by the Climate Crisis
202(15)
Jo Guldi
14 Digital Art History as Disciplinary Practice
217(21)
Emily Pugh
15 Building and Sustaining Africana Digital Humanities at HBCUs
238(9)
Rico Devara Chapman
16 A Call to Research Action: Transnational Solidarity for Digital Humanists
247(14)
Olivia Quintanilla
Jeanelle Horcasitas
17 Game Studies, Endgame?
261(12)
Anastasia Salter
Mel Stanfill
PART IV Pedagogies and Practices
273(110)
18 The Challenges and Possibilities of Social Media Data: New Directions in Literary Studies and the Digital Humanities
275(20)
Melanie Walsh
19 Language Is Not a Default Setting: Countering DH's English Problem
295(10)
Quinn Dombrowski
Patrick J. Burns
20 Librarians' Illegible Labor: Toward a Documentary Practice of Digital Humanities
305(19)
Spencer D. C. Keralis
Rafia Mirza
Maura Seale
21 Reframing the Conversation: Digital Humanists, Disabilities, and Accessibility
324(20)
Megan R. Brett
Jessica Marie Otis
Mills Kelly
22 From Precedents to Collective Action: Realities and Recommendations for Digital Dissertations in History
344(23)
Zoe LeBlanc
Celeste Twang Vy Sharpe
Jeri Wieringa
23 Critique Is the Steam: Reorienting Critical Digital Humanities across Disciplines
367(16)
James Malazita
PART V Forum: #UnsilencedPast
383(54)
Kaiama L. Glover
24 Being Undisciplined: Black Womanhood in Digital Spaces
387(13)
Marlene L. Daut
Annette K. Joseph-Gabriel
25 How This Helps Us Get Free: Telling Black Stories through Technology
400(12)
Kim Gallon
Marisa Parham
26 "Blackness" in France: Taking Up Mediatized Space
412(11)
Maboula Soumahoro
Mame-Fatou Niang
27 The Power to Create: Building Alternative (Digital) Worlds
423(14)
Martha S. Jones
Jessica Marie Johnson
Acknowledgments 437(2)
Contributors 439
Matthew K. Gold is associate professor of English and digital humanities at CUNY Graduate Center. He is editor of Debates in the Digital Humanities and, with Lauren F. Klein, coeditor of Debates in the Digital Humanities 2016 and Debates in the Digital Humanities 2019 (all from Minnesota).

Lauren F. Klein is Winship Distinguished Research Professor and associate professor of English and quantitative theory and methods at Emory University. She is author of An Archive of Taste: Race and Eating in the Early United States (Minnesota, 2020) and coauthor of Data Feminism.