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E-raamat: Transformative Digital Humanities: Challenges and Opportunities

Edited by (Seton Hall University, USA), Edited by (Seton Hall University, USA)
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Transformative Digital Humanities takes a two-pronged approach to the digital humanities: it examines the distinct kinds of work currently being undertaken in the field, while also addressing current issues in the digital humanities, including sustainability, accessibility, interdisciplinarity, and funding.

With contributions from humanities and LIS scholars based in China, Canada, England, Germany, Spain, and the United States, this collection of case studies provides a framework for readers to develop new projects as well as to see how existing projects might continue to develop over time. This volume also participates in the current digital humanities conversation by bringing forward emerging voices that offer new options for cooperation, by demonstrating how the digital humanities can become a tool for activism, and by illustrating the potential of the digital humanities to reexamine and reconstitute existing canons.

Transformative Digital Humanities

considers what sorts of challenges still exist in the field and suggests how they might be addressed. As such, the book will be essential reading for academics and students engaged in the study of information science and digital humanities. It should also be of great interest to practitioners around the globe.



Transformative Digital Humanities takes a two-pronged approach to the digital humanities: it examines the distinct kinds of work currently being undertaken in the field, while also addressing current issues in the digital humanities, including sustainability, accessibility, interdisciplinarity, and funding.

Arvustused

"Transformative Digital Humanities [ ] comprises thoughtfully curated essays on topics that are currently at the fore of many institutional conversations [ ] In dismantling traditional norms that have become associated with DH, the volume makes way for new research areas and ideas that may be constructively challenging. [ ] Each essay is meticulously researched, and substantial bibliographies offer an abundance of material for scholars." -- C. Huffaker, Utica College

*this review was included in the August 2021 issue of CHOICE.

List of figures
viii
List of contributors
ix
Preface xiv
Mary Mcaleer Balkun
Marta Mestrovic Deyrup
Introduction 1(4)
Susan Schreibman
PART I Interventions
5(48)
1 Digital decolonizations: remediating the Popol Wuj
7(11)
Catherine Addington
Karina A. Baptista
Rafael C. Alvarado
Allison Margaret Bigelow
2 "Throughlines": social injustice and activism in Los Angeles
18(14)
Marika Cifor
Britt Paris
3 Digital humanities and critical engagement: the case of the Scottish Corpus of Texts & Speech and Wee Windaes
32(21)
Race Mochridhe
PART II Architecture/infrastructure
53(38)
4 Augmented reading: digital libraries as proponents of digital humanities
55(10)
Michael Kicey
Jessica Clemons
5 Specialized information programs as a service for researchers at German academic libraries
65(14)
Sandra Simon
Timo Steyer
6 Dynamic digital humanities projects from Shanghai Library in China
79(12)
Cuijuan Xia
Xue-Ming Bao
PART III A (new) community of practice
91(52)
7 Building transformative digital projects through graduate internships
93(10)
Helene Huet
Suzan Alteri
8 Digital humanities preservation: a conversation for developing sustainable digital projects
103(17)
A. Miller
Molly Taylor-Poleskey
9 Best practices for improving communication in the digital humanities
120(13)
Maria-Dolores Olvera-Lobo
Lola Garct A-Santi Ago
10 Sustaining digital humanities initiatives in challenging times
133(10)
Mary Mcaleer Balkun
Marta Mestrovic Deyrup
PART IV Discovery and recovery
143(33)
11 Blending approaches and methodologies: the Bibliographical Database for the Historiography of Ottoman Europe (HOE)
145(11)
Vivian Strotmann
12 Work from where you are: lessons from an online anthology of early Florida literature
156(9)
Alexandra Curran
Thomas Hallock
Gary Austin
13 Growing up digital: European women's writing and digital resource development
165(11)
Zsuzsanna Varga
Index 176
Mary McAleer Balkun is Professor of English, Director of Faculty Development, and co-chair of the Digital Humanities Committee at Seton Hall University. She is also co-chair of the New Jersey Digital Humanities Consortium. She is the author of The American Counterfeit: Authenticity and Identity in American Literature and Culture (2006) and co-editor of three books.

Marta Mestrovic Deyrup is Professor/Outreach and Humanities Librarian at Seton Hall University Libraries, co-chair of the Digital Humanities Committee, and co-chair of the New Jersey Digital Humanities Consortium. She is the editor of Digital Scholarship and the author or editor of eight other books and numerous articles on scholarly communication, Slavic librarianship, and information-seeking behavior.