Understanding digital humanities
Understanding digital humanities [Texte imprimé] /
edited by David M. Berry
- Houndmills ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2012
- 1 vol. (XVIII-318 p.) : ill. ; 24 cm
Notes bibliogr.
Introduction : understanding the digital humanities / An interpretation of digital humanities / How we think : transforming power and digital technologies / Digital methods : five challenges / Archives in media theory : material media archaeology and digital humanities / Canonicalism and the computational turn / The esthetics of hidden things / The meaning and mining of legal texts / Have the humanities always been digital? : for an understanding of the 'digital humanities' in the context of originary technicity / Present, not voting : digital humanities in the panopticon / Analysis tool or design methodology? : Is there an epistemology for patterns? / Do computers dream of cinema? : film data for computer analysis and visualization / The feminist critique : mapping controversy in Wikipedia / How to compare one million images? / Cultures of formalisation : towards an encounter between humanities and computing / Transdisciplinarity and digital humanities : lessons learned from developing text-mining tools for textual analysis / David M. Berry -- Leighton Evans and Sian Rees -- N.Katherine Hayles -- Bernhard Rieder and Theo Röhle -- Jussi Parikka -- Caroline Basset -- Scott Dexter -- Mireille Hildebrandt -- Federica Frabetti -- Melissa Terras -- Dan Dixon -- Adelheid Heftberger -- Morgan Currie -- Lee Manovich -- Joris Van Zundert, Smiljana Antonijevic, Anne Beaulieu, Karina van Dalen-Oskam, Douwe Zeldenrust, and Tara L. Andrews -- Yu-wei Lin
"Confronting the digital revolution in academia, this book examines the application of new computational techniques and visualisation technologies in the Arts & Humanities. Uniting differing perspectives, leading and emerging scholars discuss the theoretical and practicalchallenges that computation raises for these disciplines"--Provided by publisher
978-0-230-29265-9 978-0-230-29264-2
Humanities / Data processing Digital media
001.30285
Notes bibliogr.
Introduction : understanding the digital humanities / An interpretation of digital humanities / How we think : transforming power and digital technologies / Digital methods : five challenges / Archives in media theory : material media archaeology and digital humanities / Canonicalism and the computational turn / The esthetics of hidden things / The meaning and mining of legal texts / Have the humanities always been digital? : for an understanding of the 'digital humanities' in the context of originary technicity / Present, not voting : digital humanities in the panopticon / Analysis tool or design methodology? : Is there an epistemology for patterns? / Do computers dream of cinema? : film data for computer analysis and visualization / The feminist critique : mapping controversy in Wikipedia / How to compare one million images? / Cultures of formalisation : towards an encounter between humanities and computing / Transdisciplinarity and digital humanities : lessons learned from developing text-mining tools for textual analysis / David M. Berry -- Leighton Evans and Sian Rees -- N.Katherine Hayles -- Bernhard Rieder and Theo Röhle -- Jussi Parikka -- Caroline Basset -- Scott Dexter -- Mireille Hildebrandt -- Federica Frabetti -- Melissa Terras -- Dan Dixon -- Adelheid Heftberger -- Morgan Currie -- Lee Manovich -- Joris Van Zundert, Smiljana Antonijevic, Anne Beaulieu, Karina van Dalen-Oskam, Douwe Zeldenrust, and Tara L. Andrews -- Yu-wei Lin
"Confronting the digital revolution in academia, this book examines the application of new computational techniques and visualisation technologies in the Arts & Humanities. Uniting differing perspectives, leading and emerging scholars discuss the theoretical and practicalchallenges that computation raises for these disciplines"--Provided by publisher
978-0-230-29265-9 978-0-230-29264-2
Humanities / Data processing Digital media
001.30285