Available Formats
On the Digital Humanities: Essays and Provocations
By (Author) Stephen Ramsay
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
7th December 2023
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Philosophy and theory of education
Digital and information technologies: social and ethical aspects
001.30285
Paperback
200
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 10mm
283g
A witty and incisive exploration of the philosophical conundrums that animate the digital humanities
Since its inception, the digital humanities has been repeatedly attacked as a threat to the humanities: warnings from literary and cultural theorists of technology overtaking English departments and the mechanization of teaching have peppered popular media. Stephen Ramsays On the Digital Humanities, a collection of essays spanning from the personal to the polemic, is a spirited defense of the field of digital humanities.
A founding figure in what was once known as humanities computing, Ramsay has a well-known and contentious relationship with what is now called the digital humanities (DH). Here Ramsay collects and updates some of his most influential and notorious essays and speeches from the past fifteen years, considering DH from an array of practical and theoretical perspectives. The essays pursue a broad variety of themes, including the nature of data and its place in more conventional notions of text and interpretation, the relationship between the constraints of computation and the more open-ended nature of the humanities, the positioning of practical skills and infrastructures in both research and pedagogical contexts, the status of DH as a program for political and social action, and personal reflections on the authors journey into the field as both a theorist and a technologist.
These wide-ranging essays all center around one idea: that DH not forsake its connection to the humanities. While digital humanities may sound like an entirely new form of engagement with the artifacts of human culture, Ramsay argues that the field well reveals what is most essential to humanistic inquiry.
Stephen Ramsay is associate professor of English and a fellow at the Center for Digital Research in the Humanities at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He is author of Reading Machines: Toward an Algorithmic Criticism and has contributions in two volumes of Minnesota's Debates in the Digital Humanities series.