Work Cited

Brügger, N. (2016). Digital Humanities in the 21st Century: Digital Material as a Driving Force. DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly, 10(3).

 

Burdick, A., Drucker, J., Lunenfeld, P., Presner, T., & Schnapp, J. (2012). Digital_Humanities. Mit Press.

 

Callaway, E., Turner, J., Stone, H., & Halstrom, A. (2020). The push and pull of digital humanities: topic modeling the “what is digital humanities?” genre. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 14(1).

 

Evens, A. (2012). Web 2.0 and the Ontology of the Digital. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 6(2).

 

Eyman, D. (2015). Digital rhetoric: Theory, method, practice. University of Michigan Press.

 

Garcia-Peñalvo, F. J. (2016). Digital humanities data processing.

 

Gold, M. K., & others. (2012). The digital humanities moment. Debates in the Digital Humanities, 9–16.

 

Kaplan, F. (2015). A map for big data research in digital humanities. Frontiers in Digital Humanities, 2, 1.

 

Kirschenbaum, M. (2014). What is “Digital Humanities,” and why are they saying such terrible things about it? Differences, 25(1), 46–63.

 

Kirschenbaum, M. G. (2016). What is digital humanities and what’s it doing in English departments? In Defining Digital Humanities (pp. 211–220). Routledge.

 

Lugmayr, A., & Teras, M. (2015). Immersive interactive technologies in digital humanities: a review and basic concepts. Proceedings of the 3rd International Workshop on Immersive Media Experiences, 31–36.

 

Ramsay, S. (2016a). On building. In Defining Digital Humanities (pp. 259–262). Routledge.

 

Ramsay, S. (2016b). Who’s in and who’s out. Routledge.

 

Winters, J. (2018). Web archives and (digital) history: a troubled past and a promising future? Sage Handbook of Web History, 593–606.

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Contemporary Digital Humanities Copyright © 2022 by Mark P. Wachowiak is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book