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Debates in the Digital Humanities 2016
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. Digital Humanities: The Expanded Field | Lauren F. Klein and Matthew K. Gold
  6. Part 1. Histories and Futures of the Digital Humanities
    1. 1. The Emergence of the Digital Humanities (as the Network Is Everting) | Steven E. Jones
    2. 2. The “Whole Game”: Digital Humanities at Community Colleges | Anne B. McGrail
    3. 3. What’s Next: The Radical, Unrealized Potential of Digital Humanities | Miriam Posner
    4. 4. Making a Case for the Black Digital Humanities | Kim Gallon
    5. 5. QueerOS: A User’s Manual | Fiona Barnett, Zach Blas, Micha Cárdenas, Jacob Gaboury, Jessica Marie Johnson, and Margaret Rhee
    6. 6. Father Busa’s Female Punch Card Operatives | Melissa Terras and Julianne Nyhan
    7. 7. On the Origin of “Hack” and “Yack” | Bethany Nowviskie
    8. 8. Reflections on a Movement: #transformDH, Growing Up | Moya Bailey, Anne Cong-Huyen, Alexis Lothian, and Amanda Phillips
  7. Part 2. Digital Humanities and Its Methods
    1. 9. Blunt Instrumentalism: On Tools and Methods | Dennis Tenen
    2. 10. Putting the Human Back into the Digital Humanities: Feminism, Generosity, and Mess | Elizabeth Losh, Jacqueline Wernimont, Laura Wexler, and Hong-An Wu
    3. 11. Mid-Sized Digital Pedagogy | Paul Fyfe
    4. 12. Re: Search and Close Reading | Michael Hancher
    5. 13. Why We Must Read the Code: The Science Wars, Episode IV | Mark C. Marino
    6. 14. Where Is Methodology in Digital Humanities? | Tanya E. Clement
    7. 15. Resistance in the Materials | Bethany Nowviskie
    8. 16. Interview with Ernesto Oroza | Alex Gil
    9. 17. Digital Humanities Knowledge: Reflections on the Introductory Graduate Syllabus | Scott Selisker
  8. Part 3. Digital Humanities and Its Practices
    1. 18. Alien Reading: Text Mining, Language Standardization, and the Humanities | Jeffrey M. Binder
    2. 19. My Old Sweethearts: On Digitization and the Future of the Print Record | Andrew Stauffer
    3. 20. Argument, Evidence, and the Limits of Digital Literary Studies | David L. Hoover
    4. 21. Pedagogies of Race: Digital Humanities in the Age of Ferguson | Amy E. Earhart and Toniesha L. Taylor
    5. 22. Here and There: Creating DH Community | Miriam Posner
    6. 23. The Sympathetic Research Imagination: Digital Humanities and the Liberal Arts | Rachel Sagner Buurma and Anna Tione Levine
    7. 24. Lessons on Public Humanities from the Civic Sphere | Wendy F. Hsu
  9. Part 4. Digital Humanities and the Disciplines
    1. 25. The Differences between Digital Humanities and Digital History | Stephen Robertson
    2. 26. Digital History’s Perpetual Future Tense | Cameron Blevins
    3. 27. Collections and/of Data: Art History and the Art Museum in the DH Mode | Matthew Battles and Michael Maizels
    4. 28. Archaeology, the Digital Humanities, and the “Big Tent” | Ethan Watrall
    5. 29. Navigating the Global Digital Humanities: Insights from Black Feminism | Roopika Risam
    6. 30. Between Knowledge and Metaknowledge: Shifting Disciplinary Borders in Digital Humanities and Library and Information Studies | Jonathan Senchyne
    7. 31. “Black Printers” on White Cards: Information Architecture in the Data Structures of the Early American Book Trades | Molly O’Hagan Hardy
    8. 32. Public, First | Sheila A. Brennan
  10. Part 5. Digital Humanities and Its Critics
    1. 33. Are Digital Humanists Utopian? | Brian Greenspan
    2. 34. Ecological Entanglements of DH | Margaret Linley
    3. 35. Toward a Cultural Critique of Digital Humanities | Domenico Fiormonte
    4. 36. How Not to Teach Digital Humanities | Ryan Cordell
    5. 37. Dropping the Digital | Jentery Sayers
    6. 38. The Dark Side of the Digital Humanities | Wendy Hui Kyong Chun, Richard Grusin, Patrick Jagoda, and Rita Raley
    7. 39. Difficult Thinking about the Digital Humanities | Mark Sample
    8. 40. The Humane Digital | Timothy Burke
    9. 41. Hold on Loosely, or Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft on the Web | Ted Underwood
  11. Part 6. Forum: Text Analysis at Scale
    1. 42. Introduction | Matthew K. Gold and Lauren F. Klein
    2. 43. Humane Computation | Stephen Ramsay
    3. 44. Distant Reading and Recent Intellectual History | Ted Underwood
    4. 45. The Ground Truth of DH Text Mining | Tanya E. Clement
    5. 46. Why I Dig: Feminist Approaches to Text Analysis | Lisa Marie Rhody
    6. 47. More Scale, More Questions: Observations from Sociology | Tressie McMillan Cottom
    7. 48. Do Digital Humanists Need to Understand Algorithms? | Benjamin M. Schmidt
    8. 49. Messy Data and Faulty Tools | Joanna Swafford
    9. 50. N + 1: A Plea for Cross-Domain Data in the Digital Humanities | Alan Liu
  12. Series Introduction and Editors’ Note | Matthew K. Gold and Lauren F. Klein
  13. Contributors

Debates in the Digital Humanities 2016

Matthew K. Gold and Lauren F. Klein, Editors

Debates in the Digital Humanities

University of Minnesota Press

Minneapolis

London

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