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Digital Humanities and Laboratories explores laboratories dedicated to the study of digital humanities (DH) in a global context and contributes to the expanding body of knowledge about situated DH knowledge production.



Digital Humanities and Laboratories explores laboratories dedicated to the study of digital humanities (DH) in a global context and contributes to the expanding body of knowledge about situated DH knowledge production.

Including contributions from a diverse, international range of scholars and practitioners, this volume examines the ways laboratories of all kinds contribute to digital research and pedagogy. Acknowledging that they are emerging amid varied cultural and scientific traditions, the volume considers how they lead to the specification of digital humanities and how a locally situated knowledge production is embedded in the global infrastructure system. As a whole, the book consolidates the discussion on the role of the laboratory in DH and brings digital humanists into the interdisciplinary debate concerning the notion of a laboratory as a critical site in the generation of experimental knowledge. Positioning the discussion in relation to ongoing debates in DH, the volume argues that laboratory studies are in an excellent position to capitalize on the theories and knowledge developed in the DH field and open up new research inquiries.

Digital Humanities and Laboratories

clearly demonstrates that the laboratory is a key site for theoretical and critical analyses of digital humanities and will thus be of interest to scholars, students and practitioners engaged in the study of DH, culture, media, heritage and infrastructure.

Foreword; The Promise of Laboratories: An Introduction to Digital
Humanities Laboratories in the 21st Century; Part 1: Epistemological and
Philosophical Perspectives;
1. A Nurturing Lab Model for Computational
Literary Studies: An Inside Perspective from the BGU Literary Lab;
2. Are We
There Yet? How a Lab Transformed from Traditional History of Science to a
Computational Research Lab;
3. Droit de cité: The Digital Lab as Digital
Milieu;
4. How to Avoid Being a DH Lab: The Stories of the Sussex Humanities
Lab; Part 2: Socio-Technical and Infrastructural Approaches;
5. More Than a
Lab: Infra-structuring the Humanities in the Digital Studio;
6. The Life of a
Digital Humanities Lab;
7. Initiating and Sustaining a Digital Humanities
Laboratory in Nigeria;
8. Theory by Other Means? Prototypes in Digital
Humanities Laboratories; Part 3: Collaborations;
9. Knowledge Transfer in
Digital Humanities Labs: Laboratory of Innovation in Digital Humanities
(LINHD-UNED);10. Exploring dHeKalos: A Digital Heritage Lab for Building Up
New Skills and Sharing Responsibilities with Cultural Institutions;
11. The
Minimum Research Outcome: A Mechanism for Generating and Managing Projects in
Labs; Part 4: Socio-Cultural Approaches;
12. Interdisciplinary Technology
Communities: Using Feminist Epistemologies and Pedagogy in a DH Lab to
Promote Social Good through Undergraduate Student Programming;
13. At Home in
the Digital Humanities?;
14. Digital Humanities Laboratories and its
Discontents: Experiments and Perspectives from India;
15. Digital Humanities
Labs: Spaces for Innovation to Reconnect the Humanities with Society
Urszula Pawlicka-Deger is a Marie Curie Research Fellow at Kings Digital Lab, Kings College London. She is conducting an ethnography of digital humanities laboratories combined with a critical analysis of infrastructure. She was a postdoctoral researcher at Aalto University, a Fulbright scholar at Washington State University Vancouver, and a fellow at the University of Birmingham.

Christopher Thomson is a Senior Lecturer in Digital Humanities at the University of Canterbury, Aotearoa/New Zealand where he researches and teaches on digital methods in humanities research, and is currently the director of the UC Arts Digital Lab. He is part of the team that produced the CEISMIC Canterbury Earthquakes Digital Archive, and has published on post-disaster archiving. He teaches and supervises students in literary studies, communications and data science.