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Readings

Readings will be chosen from this bibliography; specific reading assignments will be identified on the Schedule page. I will supply electronic PDF copies of assigned readings via our private GitHub repository.

    Borgman, Christine L. Big Data, Little Data, No Data: Scholarship in the Networked World. (excerpts)
  • Caton, Paul. “On the term ‘text’ in digital humanities.” Literary and Linguistic Computing Advance Access. February 7, 2013.
  • Causer, Tim and Melissa Terras. “Crowdsourcing Bentham: beyond the traditional boundaries of academic history.” International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing. 8(1):2014.
  • Chandra, Vikram. Geek Sublime. (excerpts)
  • Defining Digital Humanities: A Reader. eds. Melissa Terras, Julianne Nyhan, and Edward Vanhoutte. (excerpts)
  • Digital_Humanities. eds. Anne Burdick, Johanna Drucker, Peter Lunenfeld, Todd Presner, Jeffrey Schnapp. (excerpts)
  • Flanders, Julia. “The Productive Unease of 21st­century Digital Scholarship.” Digital Humanities Quarterly. 3(3) 2009.
  • Gibson, William. “Johnny Mnemonic.” Omni Magazine, 1981.
  • McGann, Jerome. A New Republic of Letters: Memory and Scholarship in the Age of Digital Reproduction. 2015. (excerpts)
  • Pierazzo, Elena. Digital Scholarly Editing: Theories, Models and Methods. (excerpts)
    Rockwell, Geoffrey and Stéfan Sinclair. Hermeneutica: Computer-Assisted Interpretation in the Humanities. 2016.
  • Svensson, Patrik. “Envisioning the Digital Humanities.” Digital Humanities Quarterly. 6(1) 2012.
  • Wernimont, Jacqueline and Julia Flanders. “Feminism in the Age of Digital Archives: The Women Writers Project.” Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature. 29(2) 2010.
  • van Zundert, Joris J. “The Case of the Bold Button: Social Shaping of Technology and the Digital Scholarly Edition.” Digital Scholarship in the Humanities. March 8, 2016.

HUMN 271

Bertrand 012
TR 9:30-11:20am
Dr. Diane Jakacki

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