
Philosophy and Digital Humanities: A review of Willard McCarty, Humanities Computing (London and NY: Palgrave, 2005) Johanna Drucker <jrd8e_at_virginia_dot_edu>, University of Virginia
Imagining the New Media Encounter - Alliance of Digital …
9 I several times in this essay invoke the concept of "Web 2.0," which came into vogue in digerati and information technology circles after 2005. Tim O' Reilly's "What is Web 2.0" (and the …
DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly: Philosophy and Digital …
Philosophy and Digital Humanities: A review of Willard McCarty, Humanities Computing (London and NY: Palgrave, 2005)
DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly: The Making of Our Cultural …
Two editors (Abby Smith from April 2004-May 2005; Marlo Welshons from June 2005-November 2006) and an editorial subcommittee of four members of the Commission (Chuck Henry, Roy …
Hypertext and Avant-texte in Twentieth-Century and …
(Foer 2005: 36) The interest in what goes on inside the human mind, which is one of the most prominent features of twentieth-century and contemporary fiction, is increasingly linked to the …
[Willis 2005, 51] What is ultimately at issue in both “digital” and “avant-garde” is our ability to relate these terms to the needs and struggles of everyday life. Put more simply, the goal is to ascribe …
Weblogs - companions.digitalhumanities.org
Herring et al. (2005) found that nearly a third of their sampled blog posts featured no links at all; they surmise that this is owing to the numerical superiority of diary-style blogs in their corpus.
As the 2005 Summit on Digital Tools at the University of Virginia found, “only about six percent of humanist scholars go beyond general purpose information technology and use digital …
Interpreting the code of a digital object has contributed to as a larger Reading Project [Pressman et al. 2015], our collaboration with Jessica Pressman, which includes an analysis of the source …
The kind of close, immersive reading that has come to define both scholarly and casual engagements with “the literary” demands a certain detachment from one's own immediate, …