Based on his keynote lecture at the international conference on Digital Humanities at Aalborg University in April 2014, John Naughton refl ects on being an engineer in a Humanities research institute that is currently seeking to adapt to the digital potentials and challenges. The Humanities represent an analytical, critical, or speculative approach whereas the so-called hard sciences focus on problem solving. Naughton discusses why he agrees with the authors of the Digital Humanities Manifesto 2.0 and why the digitisation of the Humanities not only eff ects universities and scholars but also industrial and cultural life in general
This is not a commentary on the definition, legitimacy, or future of digital humanities (DH) – there...
"This paper explores a history of humanities computing over the past decade as embodied in or repres...
This journal is a result of our frustration with 21st century humanities scholarship and disseminati...
<p class="p1">Based on his keynote lecture at the international conference on Digital Humanities at ...
The text which follows was written as a lecture for a specific audience on a unique occasion, in a s...
This article offers reflections arising from a recent colloquium at the Open University on the impli...
The paper reviews the meaning and development of digital humanities giving the examples of work publ...
Digital humanities are at the leading edge of applying computer-based technology in the humanities. ...
Digital Humanities (DH) is an unusual subject area. It is an interdiscipline, whose boundaries are s...
Projects that bridge the humanities and sciences often attract attention from journalists, but evoke...
In recent years, every measure of significant change from research to academic programming and hirin...
This is not a commentary on the definition, legitimacy, or future of digital humanities (DH) – there...
Taking some assumptions of the Postcolonial Studies as starting points, we propose to denounce the t...
Digital humanities has become an influential and widely adopted term only in the past decade. Beyond...
What effect is the move to digital-first texts having upon various types of literature and our polit...
This is not a commentary on the definition, legitimacy, or future of digital humanities (DH) – there...
"This paper explores a history of humanities computing over the past decade as embodied in or repres...
This journal is a result of our frustration with 21st century humanities scholarship and disseminati...
<p class="p1">Based on his keynote lecture at the international conference on Digital Humanities at ...
The text which follows was written as a lecture for a specific audience on a unique occasion, in a s...
This article offers reflections arising from a recent colloquium at the Open University on the impli...
The paper reviews the meaning and development of digital humanities giving the examples of work publ...
Digital humanities are at the leading edge of applying computer-based technology in the humanities. ...
Digital Humanities (DH) is an unusual subject area. It is an interdiscipline, whose boundaries are s...
Projects that bridge the humanities and sciences often attract attention from journalists, but evoke...
In recent years, every measure of significant change from research to academic programming and hirin...
This is not a commentary on the definition, legitimacy, or future of digital humanities (DH) – there...
Taking some assumptions of the Postcolonial Studies as starting points, we propose to denounce the t...
Digital humanities has become an influential and widely adopted term only in the past decade. Beyond...
What effect is the move to digital-first texts having upon various types of literature and our polit...
This is not a commentary on the definition, legitimacy, or future of digital humanities (DH) – there...
"This paper explores a history of humanities computing over the past decade as embodied in or repres...
This journal is a result of our frustration with 21st century humanities scholarship and disseminati...