tags
Our Time Is Now (It’s Always Been Our Time)
  • Roopika Risam
  • race
  • gender
  • cultural criticism
  • Black studies
  • Ethnic studies
  • Meta digital humanities
  • Reflection

Instead, the question we should be examining is how addressing the operations of race — and its relationship to gender, sexuality, nation, disability, and colonialism, among others — is nothing less than a matter of scholarly integrity and must be put at the center of digital humanities inquiry.

EN
Transmediation as Radical Pedagogy in Building Queer and Trans Digital Archives
  • Elspeth Brown
  • Cait McKinney
  • Dan Guadagnolo
  • Juan Carlos Mezo Gonzalez
  • Sid Cunningham
  • Caleigh Inman
  • Zohar Freeman
  • Amal Khurram
  • Alisha Krishna
  • Mackenzie Stewart
  • history
  • race
  • gender
  • pedagogy

    Analyzing an intensive digital collections lab focused on queer and trans community history by focusing on mapped spaces, metadata, and designed interfaces.

    EN
    Modernism and Gender at the Limits of Stylometry
    • Sean Weidman
    • Aaren Pastor
    • literary studies
    • gender
    • stylistics

      We outline the limitations of our own and prior approaches to questions of gender and literary style, and we eventually consider how even a structurally flawed stylometric analysis can acquaint us to new ways that modernism and its stylistic innovations haunt certain kinds of digital literary criticism.

      EN