Debates in the digital humanities 2023 / Matthew K. Gold and Lauren F. Klein, editors.

Other author Gold, Matthew K., editor.
Other author Klein, Lauren F., editor.
Format Book
PublicationMinneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, [2023]
Copyright Datecu2023
Descriptionxv, 444 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm.
Subjects

SeriesDebates in digital humanities
Debates in the digital humanities. ^A1434089
Contents The digital humanities, moment to moment / Matthew K. Gold and Lauren F. Klein -- Openings and interventions. Toward a political economy of digital humanities / Matthew N. Hannah -- All the work you do not see: labor, digitizers, and the foundations of digital humanities / Astrid J. Smith and Bridget Whearty -- Right-to-left (RTL) text: digital humanities plus half a billion users / Masoud Ghorbaninejad, Nathan P. Gibson, and David Joseph Wrisley -- Relation-oriented AI: why indigenous protocols matter for the digital humanities / Michelle Lee Brown, H̐uemi Whaanga, and Jason Edward Lewis -- A U.S. Latinx digital humanities manifesto / Gabriela Baeza Ventura, Mar̐uia Merchant, Lorena Gauthereau, and Crolina Villarroel -- Theories and approaches. The body is not (only) a metaphor: rethinking embodiment in DH / Harmony Bench and Kate Elswit -- The queer gap in cultural analytics / Kent K. Chang -- The feminist data manifest-NO: an introduction and four reflections / Tonia Sutherland, Marika Cifor, T. L. Cowan, Jas Rault, and Patricia Garcia -- Black is not the absence of light: restoring Black visibility and liberation to digital humanities / Nishani Frazier, Christy Hyman, and Hilary N. Green -- Digital humanities in the deepfake era / Abraham Gibson -- Operationalizing surveillance studies in the digital humanities / Christa Boyles, Andrew Boyles Petersen, and Arun Jacob -- Disciplines and institutions. A voice interrupts: digital humanities as a tool to hear Black life / Alison Martin -- Addressing an emergency: the "pragmatic tilt" required of scholarship, data, and design by the climate crisis / Jo Guldi -- Digital art history as disciplinary practice / Emily Pugh -- Building and sustaining Africana digital humanities at HBCUs / Rico Devara Chapman -- A call to research action: transnational solidarity for digital humanists / Olivia Quintanilla and Jeanelle Horcasitas -- Game studies, endgame? / Anastasia Salter and Mel Stanfill -- Pedagogies and practices. The challenges and possibilities of social media data: new directions in literary studies and the digital humanities / Melanie Walsh -- Language is not a default setting: countering DH's English problem / Quinn Dombrowski and Patrick J. Burns -- Librarians' illegible labor: toward a documentary practice of digital humanities / Spencer D. C. Keralis, Rafia Mirza, and Maura Seale -- Reframing the conversation: digital humanists, disabilities, and accessibility / Megan R. Brett, Jessica Marie Otis, and Mills Kelly -- From precedents to collective action: realities and recommendations for digital dissertations in history / Zoe LeBlanc, Celeste T̐u̐ung Vy Sharpe, and Jeri Wieringa -- Critique is the steam: reorienting critical digital humanities across disciplines / James Malazita -- Forum: #unsilencedpast / Kaiama L. Glover. Being undisciplined: Black womanhood in digital spaces / a conversation with Marlene L. Daut and Annette K. Joseph-Gabriel -- How this helps us get free: telling Black stories through technology / a conversation with Kim Gallon and Marisa Parham -- "Blackness" in France: taking up mediatized space / a conversation with Maboula Soumahoro and Mame-Fatou Niang -- The power to create: building alternative (digital) worlds / a conversation with Martha S. Jones and Jessica Marie Johnson.
Abstract "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. This latest volume in the Debates in Digital Humanities series 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."--Page 4 of cover.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references.
ISBN9781517915285
ISBN1517915287 (pb)
ISBN9781517915278 (hc)
ISBN1517915279 (hc)
ISBN(electronic book)
ISBNelectronic book

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