Journal of Digital Humanities
Vol. 1, No. 3 Summer 2012
The Journal of Digital Humanities is a comprehensive, peer-reviewed, open access journal that features the best scholarship, tools, and conversations produced by the digital humanities community in the previous quarter.
Introduction
The Difference the Digital Makes
The Editors
So much of the content of digital humanities begins in the analog world: documents that are scanned and indexed; maps that are recast in GIS; quantities that are converted to machine-readable tables. Although we tend to focus on the final product — the digital construction viewed over the web — we remain cognizant of this […]
Articles
Where Material Book Culture Meets Digital Humanities
Sarah Werner
The Digital-Physical: On Building Flipboard for iPhone and Finding Edges for Our Digital Narratives
Craig Mod
Visualizing San Francisco Bay’s Forgotten Past
Matthew M. Booker
The Impact of Social Media on the Dissemination of Research: Results of an Experiment
Melissa Terras
"To treat such objects only as tools, and implicitly capable only of providing that which they were designed to provide, undercuts the possibilities of advancing the use of models and modeling in the humanities."
Projects
1. ORBIS
ORBIS: An Interactive Scholarly Work on the Roman World
Elijah Meeks and Karl Grossner
Modeling Networks and Scholarship with ORBIS
Elijah Meeks and Karl Grossner
2. The French Book Trade in Enlightenment Europe
The French Book Trade in Enlightenment Europe Project and the STN Database
Simon Burrows and Mark Curran
How Swiss was the Société Typographique de Neuchâtel? A Digital Case Study of French Book Trade Networks
Simon Burrows and Mark Curran
3. Mapping Texts
Mapping Texts: Visualizing American Historical Newspapers
Andrew J. Torget and Jon Christensen
Building New Windows into Digitized Newspapers
Andrew J. Torget and Jon Christensen
ISSN 2165-6673