Contents
Introduction
What Gets Counted: Computational Humanities under Revision
Lauren Tilton, David Mimno, and Jessica Marie Johnson
Part 1. Asking With
Computation and Hermeneutics: Why We Still Need Interpretation to Be by (Computational) Humanists
Hannah Ringler
Computing Criticism: Humanities Concepts and Digital Methods
Mark Algee-Hewitt
Born Literary Natural Language Processing
David Bamman
Computational Parallax as Humanistic Inquiry
Crystal Hall
Manufacturing Visual Continuity: Generative Methods in the Digital Humanities
Fabian Offert and Peter Bell
Katherine McDonough
Fugitivities and Futures: Black Studies in the Digital Era
Crystal Nicole Eddins
Part 2. Asking About
Double and Triple Binds: The Barriers to Computational Ethnic Studies
Roopika Risam
Two Volumes: The Lessons of Time on the Cross
Benjamin M. Schmidt
Why Does Digital History Need Diachronic Semantic Search?
Barbara McGillivray, Federico Nanni, and Kaspar Beelen
Freedom on the Move and Ethical Challenges in the Digital History of Slavery
Vanessa M. Holden and Joshua D. Rothman
Of Coding and Quality: A Tale about Computational Humanities
Julia Damerow, Abraham Gibson, and Manfred D. Laubichler
The Future of Digital Humanities Research: Alone You May Go Faster, but Together You’ll Get Further
Marieke van Erp, Barbara McGillivray, and Tobias Blanke
Voices from the Server Room: Humanists in High-Performance Computing
Quinn Dombrowski, Tassie Gniady, David Kloster, Megan Meredith-Lobay, Jeffrey Tharsen, and Lee Zickel
A Technology of the Vernacular: Re-centering Innovation within the Humanities
Lisa Tagliaferri
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors