Bordalejo / Risam | Intersectionality in Digital Humanities | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

Bordalejo / Risam Intersectionality in Digital Humanities

E-Book, Englisch, 208 Seiten

Reihe: Collection Development, Cultural Heritage, and Digital Humanities

ISBN: 978-1-64189-051-9
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Wasserzeichen (»Systemvoraussetzungen)



Coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw in the late 1980s, intersectionality makes the case that dimensions of identity, such as gender and race, cannot be understood in isolation from each other because they work together to shape lived experience. As digital humanities has expanded in scope and content, questions of how to negotiate the overlapping influences of race, class, gender, sexuality, nation, and other dimensions that shape data, archives, and methodologies have come to the fore. Taking up these concerns, the authors in this volume explore their effects on the methodological, political, and ethical practices of digital humanities. Essays examine intersectionality from a range of positions: the influence of overlapping identities on scholars within the digital humanities community; how the fields in which they work are subject to competing tensions created by intersecting power structures within digital humanities and academia; and the methodological possibilities and scholarly potential for intersectionality as a framing theory in digital humanities scholarship.
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Weitere Infos & Material


Barbara Bordalejo and Roopika Risam: Introduction1. Moya Z. Bailey: All the Digital Humanists Are White, All the Nerds Are Men, but Some of Us Are Brave2. Roopika Risam: Beyond the Margins: Intersectionality and Digital Humanities3. Adam Vázquez: You Build the Lanes, We are the Intersections4. Dorothy Kim: Digital Humanities, Intersectionality and the Ethics of Harm5. Barbara Bordalejo: Walking Alone Online: Intersectional Violence on the Internet6. Kyle Dase: Ready Player Two: Inclusion and Positivity as a Means of Furthering Equality in the Digital Humanities and Computer Science7. Peter Robinson: Gender, Feminism, Textual Scholarship, and Digital Humanities.8. Vera Fasshauer: Faulty, Clumsy, Negligible? Revaluating Early Modern Princesses’ Letters as a Source for Cultural History and Corpus Linguistics9. Amalia Levi: Intersectionality in Digital Archives: The Case Study of the Barbados Synagogue Restoration Project Collection10. Kimberly Harsley: Accessioning Digital Content and the Unwitting Move towards Intersectionality in the Archive11. Daniel O'Donnell: All along the Watchtower: Diversity as a core intellectual value in Digital HumanitiesSelected Bibliography


BordalejoBarbara:
Barbara Bordalejo is a textual critic and digital humanist with a background in English literature. She is Assistant Professor at KU Leuven, Belgium.RisamRoopika:
Roopika Risam is Assistant Professor of English at Salem State University, Mass. Her research focuses on the role of digital humanities in African diaspora studies.


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