Interdisciplining Digital Humanities sorts through definitions and patterns of practice over roughly sixty-five years of work, providing an overview for specialists and a general audience alike. It is the only...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

Interdisciplining Digital Humanities sorts through definitions and patterns of practice over roughly sixty-five years of work, providing an overview for specialists and a general audience alike. It is the only book that tests the widespread claim that Digital Humanities is interdisciplinary. By examining the boundary work of constructing, expanding, and sustaining a new field, it depicts both the ways this new field is being situated within individual domains and dynamic cross-fertilizations that are fostering new relationships across academic boundaries. It also accounts for digital reinvigorations of “public humanities” in cultural heritage institutions of museums, archives, libraries, and community forums.


Similar Products

The Digital Humanities: A Primer for Students and ScholarsBetween Humanities and the Digital (MIT Press)Debates in the Digital HumanitiesThe New Media Reader (MIT Press)New Media: The Key ConceptsRhetoric and the Digital HumanitiesDigital Humanities Pedagogy: Practices, Principles and PoliticsA New Companion to Digital Humanities (Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture)Digital Rhetoric: Theory, Method, Practice (Digital Humanities)Strategies for Empirical Research in Writing