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Digital Humanities Quarterly, Volume 3
Volume 3, Number 1, 2009
- Gregory R. Crane, W. Brent Seales, Melissa Terras:
Acknowledgements and Dedications. - Dot Porter:
Ross Scaife (1960-2008). - Gregory Nagy, James O'Donnell:
Foreword.
- Gregory R. Crane, W. Brent Seales, Melissa Terras:
Cyberinfrastructure for Classical Philology. - Christopher Blackwell, Thomas R. Martin:
Technology, Collaboration, and Undergraduate Research. - Anne Mahoney:
Tachypaedia Byzantina: The Suda On Line as Collaborative Encyclopedia. - Bruce Robertson:
Exploring Historical RDF with Heml. - Jeffrey A. Rydberg-Cox:
Digitizing Latin Incunabula: Challenges, Methods, and Possibilities. - Neel Smith:
Citation in Classical Studies. - Casey Dué, Mary Ebbott:
Digital Criticism: Editorial Standards for the Homer Multitext. - Hugh Cayless, Charlotte Roueché, Tom Elliott, Gabriel Bodard:
Epigraphy in 2017. - Tom Elliott, Sean Gillies:
Digital Geography and Classics. - Raphael A. Finkel, Gregory Stump:
What Your Teacher Told You is True: Latin Verbs Have Four Principal Parts. - David Bamman, Gregory R. Crane:
Computational Linguistics and Classical Lexicography. - Gregory R. Crane, Alison Babeu, David Bamman, Thomas M. Breuel, Lisa Cerrato, Daniel Deckers, Anke Lüdeling, David M. Mimno, Rashmi Singhal, David A. Smith, Amir Zeldes:
Classics in the Million Book Library. - Christopher Blackwell, Gregory R. Crane:
Conclusion: Cyberinfrastructure, the Scaife Digital Library and Classics in a Digital age.
Volume 3, Number 2, 2009
- Matthew G. Kirschenbaum:
Done: Finishing Projects in the Digital Humanities. - William A. Kretzschmar Jr.:
Large-Scale Humanities Computing Projects: Snakes Eating Tails, or Every End is a New Beginning? - David Sewell:
It's For Sale, So It Must Be Finished: Digital Projects in the Scholarly Publishing World. - Susan Brown, Patricia Clements, Isobel Grundy, Stan Ruecker, Jeffery Antoniuk, Sharon Balazs:
Published Yet Never Done: The Tension Between Projection and Completion in Digital Humanities Research.
- Shlomo Argamon, Mark Olsen:
Words, Patterns and Documents: Experiments in Machine Learning and Text Analysis. - Shlomo Argamon, Jean-Baptiste Goulain, Russell Horton, Mark Olsen:
Vive la Différence! Text Mining Gender Difference in French Literature. - Shlomo Argamon, Charles Cooney, Russell Horton, Mark Olsen, Sterling Stuart Stein, Robert Voyer:
Gender, Race, and Nationality in Black Drama, 1950-2006: Mining Differences in Language Use in Authors and their Characters. - Russell Horton, Robert Morrissey, Mark Olsen, Glenn Roe, Robert Voyer:
Mining Eighteenth Century Ontologies: Machine Learning and Knowledge Classification in the Encyclopédie. - Sean Meehan:
Text Minding: "A Response to Gender, Race, and Nationality in Black Drama, 1850-2000: Mining Differences in Language Use in Authors and their Characters".
- Scott Rettberg:
Communitizing Electronic Literature. - Sarah Toton, Stacey Martin:
Teaching and Learning from the U.S. South in Global Contexts: A Case Study of Southern Spaces and Southcomb. - Eric Gordon, David Bogen:
Designing Choreographies for the New Economy of Attention.
- Johanna Drucker:
A Review of Matthew Kirschenbaum, Mechanisms: New Media and the Forensic Imagination Cambridge, MA and London, UK: MIT University Press, 2008.
Volume 3, Number 3, 2009
- Amy Earhart, Maura Ives:
Introduction.
- Peter M. W. Robinson:
The Ends of Editing. - Morris Eaves:
Picture Problems: X-Editing Images 1992-2010. - Kenneth M. Price:
Edition, Project, Database, Archive, Thematic Research Collection: What's in a Name? - Peter Shillingsburg:
How Literary Works Exist: Convenient Scholarly Editions. - Julia Flanders:
The Productive Unease of 21st-century Digital Scholarship.
- Olin Bjork:
Reinventing the Classroom Edition: Paradise Lost Book IX Flash Audiotext. - Amy Earhart:
Mapping Concord: Google Maps and the 19th-Century Concord Digital Archive. - Eugene W. Lyman:
"May the Text Rise up to Meet You": New Ways of Reading Old Manuscripts. - Laura Mandell:
The Poetess Archive Database. - Aimee Roundtree:
Simulated Visuals: Some Rhetorical and Ethical Implications. - Eduardo Urbina, Richard Furuta, Steven Escar Smith:
Cervantes Project: The Digital Quixote Iconography Collection. - Wesley Raabe:
Over Uncle Tom's Dead Body: Publication Context and Textual Variation in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin.
- Katheryn Giglio, John Venecek:
The Radical Historicity of Everything: Exploring Shakespearean Identity with Web 2.0. - Jerome McDonough:
XML, Interoperability and the Social Construction of Markup Languages: The Library Example. - Patrik Svensson:
Humanities Computing as Digital Humanities. - Philip Sandifer:
Avatari: Disruption and Imago in Video Games. - Stan Ruecker, Milena Radzikowska, Stéfan Sinclair:
Designing Data Mining Droplets: New Interface Objects for the Humanities Scholar.
Volume 3, Number 4, 2009
- Stuart E. Dunn, Tobias Blanke:
Digital Humanities Quarterly Special Cluster on Arts and Humanities e-Science.
- Melissa Terras:
The Potential and Problems in using High Performance Computing in the Arts and Humanities: the Researching e-Science Analysis of Census Holdings (ReACH) Project. - Peter F. Ainsworth, Michael Meredith:
e-Science for Medievalists: Options, Challenges, Solutions and Opportunities. - Nicolas Gold:
Service-Oriented Software in the Humanities: A Software Engineering Perspective. - John Unsworth:
The Making of Our Cultural Commonwealth. - Gregory Sporton:
The e Prefix: e-Science, e-Art & the New Creativity. - Angela Piccini:
Locating Grid Technologies: Performativity, Place, Space: Challenging the Institutionalized Spaces of e-Science. - Mark Hedges:
Grid-enabling Humanities Datasets.
- Amélie Zöllner-Weber:
Ontologies and Logic Reasoning as Tools in Humanities? - Kari Kraus:
Conjectural Criticism: Computing Past and Future Texts. - Ray Siemens, Cara Leitch, Analisa Blake, Karin Armstrong, John Willinsky:
"It May Change My Understanding of the Field": Understanding Reading Tools for Scholars and Professional Readers. - Christine L. Borgman:
The Digital Future is Now: A Call to Action for the Humanities.
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