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Between humanities and the digital

Title By: Svensson, Patrik [Edited by] | Goldberg, David Theo [Edited by]
Material type: BookPublisher: Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press, c2015.Description: xii, 574 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.ISBN: 9780262028684Subject(s): Humanities -- Data processing | Humanities -- Research | Humanities -- Study and teaching | Digital media | Digital communications | Digital mediaDDC classification: 001.30285 BE TW Online resources: Location Map
Summary:
"Like most academic discourses, the Digital Humanities are a conversation in flux. Some would argue that the Digital Humanities are already a well-established field, pointing to the 20-year history of Humanities Computing. Others (me) see a new breed of academic with skills in both technology and the traditional humanities (the Platform Studies and Software Studies series), while others might indeed see this as a last gasp for the Modern Language Association's relevance. The point is that this is a conversation and, as such, various voices need to be heard. In David Goldberg and Patrik Svensson's Between Humanities and the Digital Age, more than 40 authors contribute to this discussion from a global, cross-disciplinary perspective. Describing the breadth and depth of how the humanities engage with the digital and information technology (including discipline-specific studies and perspectives, research infrastructure, innovative tools, creative expression and activist engagement), Between Humanities and the Digital 'demonstrates the diversity of research and theory building that lies between the existence of digital technologies and humanistic perspectives on knowledge generation'"--Provided by publisher.
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Item type Home library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
REGULAR University of Wollongong in Dubai
Main Collection
001.30285 BE TW (Browse shelf) Available T0057909
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references (pages 507-564) and index.

The example : some historical considerations / Jonathan Sterne -- Humanities in the digital age / Alan Liu and William G. Thomas III -- Me? A digital humanist? / Chandra Mukerji -- Critical theory and the mangle of digital humanities / Todd Presner -- "Does this technology serve human purposes?" A "necessary conversation" with Sherry Turkle / Henry Jenkins -- Humanist computing at the end of the individual voice and the authoritative text / Johanna Drucker -- Beyond infrostructure : re-humanizing digital humanities in India / Nishant Shah -- Toward a transnational Asian/American digital humanities : a #transformDH invitation / Anne Cong-Huyen -- Beyond the elbow-patched playground / Ian Bogost -- Why yack needs hack (and vice versa) : from digital humanities to digital literacy / Cathy N. Davidson -- Toward problem-based modeling in the digital humanities / Ray Siemens and Jentery Sayers -- Deprovincializing digital humanities / David Theo Goldberg -- Circuit-bending history : sketches toward a digital schematic / Whitney Anne Trettien -- Medieval materiality through the digital lens / Cecilia Lindh�e -- Computational literature / Nick Montfort -- The cut between us : digital remix and the expression of self / Jenna Ng -- Locating the mobile and social : a preliminary discussion of camera phones and locative media / Larissa Hjorth -- "Did you mean 'Why are women cranky?'" Google -- a means of inscription, a means of de-inscription? / Jennie Olofsson -- Time wars of the twentieth century and the twenty-first century toolkit : the history and politics of longue-duree thinking as a prelude to the digital analysis of the past / Jo Guldi -- An experiment in collaborative humanities : envisioning globalities 500-1500 CD / Geraldine Heng and Michael Widner -- Digital humanities and the study of religion / Tim Hutchings -- Cyber archaeology : a post-virtual perspective / Maurizio Forte -- Literature, neuroscience, and digital humanities / Natalie Phillips and Stephen Rachman -- The humanistiscope -- exploring the situatedness of humanities infrastructure / Patrik Svensson -- "Stuff you can kick" : toward a theory of media infrastructures / Lisa Parks -- Distant mirrors and the LAMP / Matthew Kirschenbaum -- Resistance in the materials / Bethany Nowviskie -- The digital humanities as a laboratory / Amy E. Earhart -- A map is not a picture : how the digital world threatens the validity of printed maps / Patricia Seed -- Spatial history as scholarly practice / Zephyr Frank -- Utopian pedagogies : teaching from the margins of the digital humanities / Elizabeth Losh -- The face and the public : race, secrecy, and digital art practice / Jennifer Gonz�alez -- Scholarly publishing in the digital age / Kathleen Fitzpatrick -- Critical transmission / Mats Dahlstr�om -- Post-archive : the humanities, the archive, and the database / Tara McPherson -- Final commentary : a provocation / N. Katherine Hayles.

"Like most academic discourses, the Digital Humanities are a conversation in flux. Some would argue that the Digital Humanities are already a well-established field, pointing to the 20-year history of Humanities Computing. Others (me) see a new breed of academic with skills in both technology and the traditional humanities (the Platform Studies and Software Studies series), while others might indeed see this as a last gasp for the Modern Language Association's relevance. The point is that this is a conversation and, as such, various voices need to be heard. In David Goldberg and Patrik Svensson's Between Humanities and the Digital Age, more than 40 authors contribute to this discussion from a global, cross-disciplinary perspective. Describing the breadth and depth of how the humanities engage with the digital and information technology (including discipline-specific studies and perspectives, research infrastructure, innovative tools, creative expression and activist engagement), Between Humanities and the Digital 'demonstrates the diversity of research and theory building that lies between the existence of digital technologies and humanistic perspectives on knowledge generation'"--Provided by publisher.

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