This editorial introduces a series of short papers dedicated to issues of workflow in digital humanities research. Paper contributors include Melodee Beals (Loughborough University), Adam Crymble and Katrina Navikas (University of Hertfordshire), and Seth Cayley (Director of Research Publishing at Gale)
In recent years, every measure of significant change from research to academic programming and hirin...
Large-scale digitisation of historical paper publications enables Humanities scholars to analyse vas...
Digital Humanities (DH) is an unusual subject area. It is an interdiscipline, whose boundaries are s...
While the term ‘digital humanities’ appears inclusive its exact meaning remains unclear and its earl...
This paper gives an overview of the ways that humanities research is embracing new digital resources...
The field of Digital Humanities is changing the way historians do their research. Historians use too...
The field of Digital Humanities is changing the way historians do their research. Historians use too...
We are standing at the edge of a major transformation in manuscript studies. The proliferation of di...
This article offers reflections arising from a recent colloquium at the Open University on the impli...
The figure of the scholarly workflow is common in studies of scholarly communications. Accounts and ...
Doueihi's paper given November 8, 2008, at the Forum on Academic Publishing in the Humanities
Traditional humanities research has been leveraged but also destabilised by the increasing accessibi...
The technological progress of the past decades has had a transformative effect on both cultural inst...
How does technology impact research practices in the humanities? How does digitisation shape scholar...
This workshop took place at the Institute of Historical Research on July 7th 2011. This report conta...
In recent years, every measure of significant change from research to academic programming and hirin...
Large-scale digitisation of historical paper publications enables Humanities scholars to analyse vas...
Digital Humanities (DH) is an unusual subject area. It is an interdiscipline, whose boundaries are s...
While the term ‘digital humanities’ appears inclusive its exact meaning remains unclear and its earl...
This paper gives an overview of the ways that humanities research is embracing new digital resources...
The field of Digital Humanities is changing the way historians do their research. Historians use too...
The field of Digital Humanities is changing the way historians do their research. Historians use too...
We are standing at the edge of a major transformation in manuscript studies. The proliferation of di...
This article offers reflections arising from a recent colloquium at the Open University on the impli...
The figure of the scholarly workflow is common in studies of scholarly communications. Accounts and ...
Doueihi's paper given November 8, 2008, at the Forum on Academic Publishing in the Humanities
Traditional humanities research has been leveraged but also destabilised by the increasing accessibi...
The technological progress of the past decades has had a transformative effect on both cultural inst...
How does technology impact research practices in the humanities? How does digitisation shape scholar...
This workshop took place at the Institute of Historical Research on July 7th 2011. This report conta...
In recent years, every measure of significant change from research to academic programming and hirin...
Large-scale digitisation of historical paper publications enables Humanities scholars to analyse vas...
Digital Humanities (DH) is an unusual subject area. It is an interdiscipline, whose boundaries are s...