Fr. 168.00

The Digital Humanities and the Digital Modern - Humanities and New Media

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book provides new critical and methodological approaches to digital humanities, intended to guide technical development as well as critical analysis. Informed by the history of technology and culture and new perspectives on modernity, Smithies grounds his claims in the engineered nature of computing devices and their complex entanglement with our communities, our scholarly traditions, and our sense of self. The distorting mentalité of the digital modern informs our attitudes to computers and computationally intensive research, leading scholars to reject articulations of meaning that admit the interdependence of humans and the complex socio-technological systems we are embedded in. By framing digital humanities with the digital modern, researchers can rebuild our relationship to technical development, and seek perspectives that unite practical and critical activity. This requires close attention to the cyber-infrastructures that inform our research, the software-intensive methods that are producing new knowledge, and the ethical issues implicit in the production of digital humanities tools and methods. The book will be of interest to anyone interested in the intersection of technology with humanities research, and the future of digital humanities.

List of contents

1. Introduction.- 2. The Digital Modern.- 3. Computation and Crisis.- 4. AI, DH, and the Automation of Labour.- 5. Towards a Systems Analysis of the Humanities.- 6. Software Intensive Humanities.- 7. The Ethics of Production.- 8. Conclusion: The Culture of the Digital Humanities.- 

About the author

James Smithies is Director of King’s Digital Lab at King’s College London. He was previously Senior Lecturer in Digital Humanities and Associate Director of the UC CEISMIC Digital Archive at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand.

Summary

This book provides new critical and methodological approaches to digital humanities, intended to guide technical development as well as critical analysis. Informed by the history of technology and culture and new perspectives on modernity, Smithies grounds his claims in the engineered nature of computing devices and their complex entanglement with our communities, our scholarly traditions, and our sense of self. The distorting mentalité of the digital modern informs our attitudes to computers and computationally intensive research, leading scholars to reject articulations of meaning that admit the interdependence of humans and the complex socio-technological systems we are embedded in. By framing digital humanities with the digital modern, researchers can rebuild our relationship to technical development, and seek perspectives that unite practical and critical activity. This requires close attention to the cyber-infrastructures that inform our research, the software-intensive methods that are producing new knowledge, and the ethical issues implicit in the production of digital humanities tools and methods. The book will be of interest to anyone interested in the intersection of technology with humanities research, and the future of digital humanities.

Product details

Authors James Smithies
Publisher Springer Palgrave Macmillan
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2017
 
EAN 9781137499431
ISBN 978-1-137-49943-1
No. of pages 268
Dimensions 155 mm x 21 mm x 217 mm
Weight 455 g
Illustrations IX, 268 p. 5 illus.
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies
Social sciences, law, business > Media, communication > Miscellaneous

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