Digital humanities and digital literary studies face much the same challenges as contemporary media art: what will become of them once their media are no longer “new”, and the limitations of processing art as data have become more clearly and widely understood? This paper revisits information aesthetics and computer poetics from the 1960s and 1970s, casting them as precursors of today’s digital humanities, with many of the same issues, achievements and failures, and with their own hype cycles of boom and bust. Conversely, “post-digital” and “Post-Internet” trends in music, graphic design and visual arts may anticipate possible futures of digital humanities and literary studies after the hype has passed
Challenging the widely popular techno-centric and progress-oriented perspective which presents curre...
Digital Humanities remains a contested, umbrella term covering many types of work in numerous discip...
Welcome to the third issue of Humanist Studies & the Digital Age. It continues the discourse started...
If the interest in the post-digital seems to point at anything, it is that the usefulness of the dig...
The article offers a definition, overview, and assessment of the current state of digital humanities...
In 2012, Digital Humanities became one of the most talked-about topics in the humanities and was sug...
Today we live in computational abundance whereby our everyday lives and the environment that surroun...
International audience[Paper] Enrolled in the avant-garde of the 1950’s, digital poetry first assert...
International audienceBased on the experience of the junior research group “Berlin intellectuals 180...
In the context of this special issue and a number of other recent publications and initiatives, the ...
Throughout the modern period, the multivalence of the concept of media has extended beyond the techn...
Where is art in the digital era? This essay identifies the digital as an abstract, formal system. Si...
Literature has stood the test of time, though there were many changes in its form. It truly reflects...
This dissertation explores the situation of twentieth-century art and literature becoming digital. F...
According to Florian Cramer, the “post-digital” describes an approach to digital media that no longe...
Challenging the widely popular techno-centric and progress-oriented perspective which presents curre...
Digital Humanities remains a contested, umbrella term covering many types of work in numerous discip...
Welcome to the third issue of Humanist Studies & the Digital Age. It continues the discourse started...
If the interest in the post-digital seems to point at anything, it is that the usefulness of the dig...
The article offers a definition, overview, and assessment of the current state of digital humanities...
In 2012, Digital Humanities became one of the most talked-about topics in the humanities and was sug...
Today we live in computational abundance whereby our everyday lives and the environment that surroun...
International audience[Paper] Enrolled in the avant-garde of the 1950’s, digital poetry first assert...
International audienceBased on the experience of the junior research group “Berlin intellectuals 180...
In the context of this special issue and a number of other recent publications and initiatives, the ...
Throughout the modern period, the multivalence of the concept of media has extended beyond the techn...
Where is art in the digital era? This essay identifies the digital as an abstract, formal system. Si...
Literature has stood the test of time, though there were many changes in its form. It truly reflects...
This dissertation explores the situation of twentieth-century art and literature becoming digital. F...
According to Florian Cramer, the “post-digital” describes an approach to digital media that no longe...
Challenging the widely popular techno-centric and progress-oriented perspective which presents curre...
Digital Humanities remains a contested, umbrella term covering many types of work in numerous discip...
Welcome to the third issue of Humanist Studies & the Digital Age. It continues the discourse started...