Digital Humanities is the interaction, interrelation, and intersection of technology, culture, language, and literature.
Allison Butler is a sophomore at Bucknell University. She is from New York. She likes fashion and tennis.
Digital Humanities is the interaction, interrelation, and intersection of technology, culture, language, and literature.
Allison Butler is a sophomore at Bucknell University. She is from New York. She likes fashion and tennis.
The definition of DH that I am being shown is creating new problems, challenges, and many opportunities by using new technologies.
Morgan Graning is a junior at Bucknell University. She is a political science major and sociology minor. Morgan is from Long Island, New York.
DH is evolving field that aims to use technology to find answers to questions in the humanities.
Matt Perricone is an Accounting and Financial Management major at Bucknell University. He is a senior from outside of Philadelphia, PA. Before Bucknell, he attended Germantown Academy in Fort Washington, PA.
For some reason, humanities is the most commonly used term, but it does not show up on the picture. This is probably a glitch. There are 160 unique words and 270 total words so about half are unique words. Could this be that humanities was dubbed as a stop word? Maybe. My corpus has 1 document with 274 total words and 160 unique word forms.
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Dr. Katherine Faull is Professor of German and Humanities at Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA. Author and editor of six book-length publications, over 40 peer-reviewed articles and chapters, she was educated at King’s College, London (BA Hons, German/Russian) and Princeton University (Germanic Languages and Literatures), and is a Life Member of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge. The recipient of three major grant awards from the National Endowment for the Humanities, she has published extensively on questions of gender, race, and autobiography in the Moravian Church in North America in the colonial period. She serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Moravian History, the book series, Anabaptist and Pietist Studies with the Pennsylvania State University Press, and is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Moravian Archives, Bethlehem, PA. Her current international collaborative DH project, Moravian Lives, focuses on the digital exploration of Moravian memoirs (moravian.bucknell.edu) and brings together top international scholars in the field of Pietism with graduate and undergraduate students in the exploration of 18th-century life writing, gender, race, and the Moravian world. Katie has also published scholarly articles on digital pedagogy at a liberal arts institution, DH and religious history, and digital visualization in the humanities.
For more, go to http://www.katiefaull.com