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table of contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Introduction: The Digital Humanities, Moment to Moment by Matthew K. Gold and Lauren F. Klein
Part I. Openings and Interventions
1. Toward a Political Economy of Digital Humanities by Matthew N. Hannah
2. All the Work You Do Not See: Labor, Digitizers, and the Foundations of Digital Humanities by Astrid J. Smith and Bridget Whearty
3. Right-to-Left (RTL) Text: Digital Humanists Plus Half a Billion Users by Masoud Ghorbaninejad, Nathan P. Gibson, and David Joseph Wrisley
4. Relation-Oriented AI: Why Indigenous Protocols Matter for the Digital Humanities by Michelle Lee Brown, Hēmi Whaanga, and Jason Edward Lewis
5. A U.S. Latinx Digital Humanities Manifesto by Gabriela Baeza Ventura, María Eugenia Cotera, Linda García Merchant, Lorena Gauthereau, and Carolina Villarroel
Part II. Theories and Approaches
6. The Body Is Not (Only) a Metaphor: Rethinking Embodiment in DH by Harmony Bench and Kate Elswit
7. The Queer Gap in Cultural Analytics by Kent K. Chang
8. The Feminist Data Manifest-NO: An Introduction and Four Reflections by Tonia Sutherland, Marika Cifor, T. L. Cowan, Jas Rault, and Patricia Garcia
9. Black Is Not the Absence of Light: Restoring Black Visibility and Liberation to Digital Humanities by Nishani Frazier, Christy Hyman, and Hilary N. Green
10. Digital Humanities in the Deepfake Era by Abraham Gibson
11. Operationalizing Surveillance Studies in the Digital Humanities by Christina Boyles, Andrew Boyles Petersen, and Arun Jacob
Part III. Disciplines and Institutions
12. A Voice Interrupts: Digital Humanities as a Tool to Hear Black Life by Alison Martin
13. Addressing an Emergency: The “Pragmatic Tilt” Required of Scholarship, Data, and Design by the Climate Crisis by Jo Guldi
14. Digital Art History as Disciplinary Practice by Emily Pugh
15. Building and Sustaining Africana Digital Humanities at HBCUs by Rico Devara Chapman
16. A Call to Research Action: Transnational Solidarity for Digital Humanists by Olivia Quintanilla and Jeanelle Horcasitas
17. Game Studies, Endgame? by Anastasia Salter and Mel Stanfill
Part IV. Pedagogies and Practices
18. The Challenges and Possibilities of Social Media Data: New Directions in Literary Studies and the Digital Humanities by Melanie Walsh
19. Language Is Not a Default Setting: Countering DH’s English Problem by Quinn Dombrowski and Patrick J. Burns
20. Librarians’ Illegible Labor: Toward a Documentary Practice of Digital Humanities by Spencer D. C. Keralis, Rafia Mirza, and Maura Seale
21. Reframing the Conversation: Digital Humanists, Disabilities, and Accessibility by Megan R. Brett, Jessica Marie Otis, and Mills Kelly
22. From Precedents to Collective Action: Realities and Recommendations for Digital Dissertations in History by Zoe LeBlanc, Celeste Tường Vy Sharpe, and Jeri Wieringa
23. Critique Is the Steam: Reorienting Critical Digital Humanities across Disciplines by James Malazita
Part V. Forum: #UnsilencedPast by Kaiama L. Glover
24. Being Undisciplined: Black Womanhood in Digital Spaces, a conversation with Marlene L. Daut and Annette K. Joseph-Gabriel
25. How This Helps Us Get Free: Telling Black Stories through Technology, a conversation with Kim Gallon and Marisa Parham
26. “Blackness” in France: Taking Up Mediatized Space, a conversation with Maboula Soumahoro and Mame-Fatou Niang
27. The Power to Create: Building Alternative (Digital) Worlds, a conversation with Martha S. Jones and Jessica Marie Johnson
Acknowledgments
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