Digital Humanities

Digital Humanities

Jan 06, 2022
Even if few institutions are commemorating the anniversary, individual scholars and groups say they’re working to keep lessons of the insurrection alive.

Archive

January 6, 2022
Even if few institutions are commemorating the anniversary, individual scholars and groups say they’re working to keep lessons of the insurrection alive.
December 14, 2021
Under a new initiative from MIT Press, early purchasing commitments from a subset of libraries will make the spring 2022 slate of monographs and edited collections open access.
May 18, 2020
By some measures, the humanities are in decline. By others, their death has been overstated. A new report offers some data from before the pandemic.
July 9, 2018
Rapidly produced and highly topical digital humanities projects are challenging perceptions of the field.
June 29, 2018
Irreplaceable audio and video recordings from the 20th century are languishing in university collections, deteriorating. Can they be saved?
January 29, 2018
Literary scholars should follow the example of historians and create digital work to reach people colleges and universities have ignored, Will Fenton writes.
June 19, 2017
Professor’s essay about the original color of classical statues is mocked by conservative websites -- and then she receives online threats.
May 6, 2016
Controversial article argues digital humanities scholars are -- intentionally or not -- leading a "neoliberal takeover" of colleges and universities.
March 10, 2016
Universities and nonprofits are building a "preservation ecosystem" to ensure today's research can benefit scholars of the future.
November 24, 2015
Humanities scholars conduct their research in an arena that is flexible, efficient and cost-effective, and they should be funded accordingly, writes Elizabeth A. Lehfeldt.

Pages

Back to Top