DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly
2023 17.1
Project Resiliency
Editors: Martin Holmes, Matt Huculak, Janelle Jenstad
Front Matter
[en] Introduction to Special Issue: Project
Resiliency in the Digital Humanities
Martin Holmes, University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre; Janelle Jenstad, University of Victoria Department of English; J. Matthew Huculak, University of Victoria Advanced Research Services & Digital Scholarship Librarian
Abstract
[en] Articles
[en] The Stories
We Tell: Project Narratives, Project Endings, and the Affective Value of
Collaboration
Claire Battershill, University of Toronto
Abstract
[en] [en] “No Boutique or Fashionable Technologies”: Project
Development, Mentorship, and Sustainability in an Innovation-First
World
Constance Crompton, Department of Communication, University of Ottawa
Abstract
[en] [en] Academics Retire
and Servers Die: Adventures in the Hosting and Storage of Digital Humanities
Projects
James Cummings, Newcastle University
Abstract
[en] [en] The Dangers
of Disappearance, the Opportunities of Recovery
Sara Diamond, OCAD University Faculty of Arts & Science
Abstract
[en] [en] Doing it for
Ourselves: The New Archive Built by and Responsive to the Researcher
Nick Thieberger, School of Languages and Linguistics, University of Melbourne, Australia
Abstract
[en] [en] “Follow the Money?”: Funding and Digital
Sustainability
Jessica Otis, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University
Abstract
[en] [en] From Tamagotchis to Pet Rocks: On Learning to
Love Simplicity through the Endings Principles
Martin Holmes, University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre; Joey Takeda, Digital Humanities Innovation Lab, Simon Fraser University
Abstract
[en] [en] Reference Rot
in the Digital Humanities Literature: An Analysis of Citations Containing
Website Links in DHQ
Zach Coble, New York University Libraries; Jojo Karlin, New York University Libraries
Abstract
[en] [en] The Project
Endings Interviews: A Summary of Methodological Foundations
Emily Comeau, University of British Columbia
Abstract
[en] Articles
[en] More than
Distant Viewing: Qualitative Views on Machine Learning as an Automated
Analysis Method in Networked Climate Image Communication
Paul Heinicker, University of Potsdam; Janna Kienbaum, University of Potsdam; Birgit Schneider, University of Potsdam
Abstract
[en] [en] Whitman Tracked Between Editions, Rossetti as a Complex Subversive, and the
Collective Sense of Authorship: A Mixed Methods Accounting of a Hyperlinked
“Calamus”
David Thomson, Independent Scholar
Abstract
[en] [en] Radically Accessible Shakespeare: Cripping the
Digital Shakespeare Canon through Universal Design and Disability Studies
Christine M. Gottlieb, Cal State East Bay
Abstract
[en] [en] Tiresias: A Novel Approach for Mining Book
Indices
Moshe Blidstein, University of Haifa; Daphne Raban, University of Haifa
Abstract
[en] [en] “The Page Is an Image Again:” Bleedmapping as an Analysis Technique for Historical Newspapers
Quintus van Galen, University of Amsterdam
Abstract
[en] [en] The case of the golden background, a virtual
restoration and a physical reconstruction of the medieval Crucifixion of the Lindau
Master (c. 1425)
Liselore Tissen, Leiden University and Delft University of Technology; Sanne Frequin, Utrecht University; Ruben Wiersma, Delft University of Technology
Abstract
[en] [en] A Keyword
Analysis of “Climate Change” in Contemporary
Literary Studies, 2000-2022
Matt Morgenstern, Purdue University
Abstract
[en] Reviews
[en] The History of Digital History: A Review of Crymble (2021)
Helen B. Kampmann Marodin, University of South Carolina
Abstract
[en]