DHQ People
DHQ Editors
Julia is the Director of the Digital Scholarship Group at Northeastern University, where she is also a Professor of the Practice in the English Department and the Director of the Women Writers Project. Her research focuses on the challenges of digital text representation, text encoding, and scholarly communication. She also does a variety of freelance technology consulting. She has written and spoken on a variety of issues including the gender politics of scholarly digital editing, documentation, the history of quantitative methods of literary analysis, digital textuality and materiality, and various practical problems in text encoding. She has served as President and Vice President of ACH and Chair of the Text Encoding Initiative Consortium.
Emily Edwards is an Assistant Professor of Digital Humanities and Educational Technologist at St. Francis College in Brooklyn, NY. Dr. Edwards currently serves as co-director of the grant Digital Humanities Across the Curriculum (DHAC), funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). Her research focuses on the intersection of digital media, technologies, and platforms, and race, gender, and immigration in global contexts. Her work has appeared in journals such as New Media & Society, Critical Studies in Media Communication, and Glocalism: Journal of culture, politics and innovation.
Ben Lee is a fourth year Ph.D. candidate in the Paul G. Allen School for Computer Science & Engineering at the University of Washington, where he is a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow in Machine Learning. He recently served as a 2020 Innovator in Residence at the Library of Congress and the 2020-2021 Richard and Ina Willner Memorial Fellow in the Stroum Center for Jewish Studies at the University of Washington. Previously, he was the inaugural Digital Humanities Associate Fellow at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and a Visiting Fellow in Harvard’s History Department.
Dr. Nirmala Menon is Professor and currently Chair in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences (HSS), IIT Indore. She leads the Digital Humanities and Publishing Research Group at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Indore, India. Menon is the author of Migrant Identities of Creole Cosmopolitans: Transcultural Narratives of Contemporary Postcoloniality (Peter Lang Publishing, Germany, 2014) and Remapping the Postcolonial Canon: Remap, Reimagine, Retranslate (Palgrave Macmillan, UK 2017). She is the Co-Editor of the first multilingual Volume of E-literature to be published from India forthcoming in 2022. Apart from the books, she has published more than 50 research papers in numerous international journals (Oxford University Press, Taylor and Francis, and Sage among others) and speaks, writes and publishes about postcolonial studies, digital Humanities and scholarly publishing. She mentors research scholars and runs DH projects from the research lab at IIT Indore. Her research group works on Digital Projects relating to Cultural Heritage through both creation and curation of Archives and Databases. She is the Project Director for KSHIP (Knowledge Sharing in Publishing), an Open Access Publishing platform.
She has given more than 50 lectures and keynotes at various national and international forums and lead or facilitated workshops in Digital Humanities in India and internationally. She is current Chair, CenterNet, Member, Advisory Board of the Open Library of Humanities (OLH), Ubiquity Press, UK and Open Access India and Chair, (2016-17) CLCS Global South Forum, Modern Language Association (MLA), Dr Menon is one the founder members and current President of Digital Humanities Alliance in Research and Teaching Innovation (DHARTI).
John A. Walsh is an associate professor in the School of Library and Information Science at Indiana University, where he teaches and conducts research in the areas of digital humanities and digital libraries. His research focuses on electronic textuality and the nature of the document in the digital age. He explores the evolution of the document, the book, and the literary text--both born-digital new media texts and digital representations of written and printed texts. Digital environments and tools offer possibilities for new representations of texts, new readings, and new strategies and habits of reading as documents evolve from more or less static and fixed texts to fluid and malleable data. As part of exploring these transformational developments in textuality, Walsh studies the application of metadata and semantic web technologies to facilitate new forms of close, distant, and social reading and interpretation. In addition to his research activities, Walsh has over ten years experience as a developer, manager, and librarian working on digital scholarly projects. Current research projects include The Swinburne Project, The Chymistry of Isaac Newton , and Comic Book Markup Language.
Sarah Buchanan is an Assistant Professor at the iSchool at the University of Missouri. Her teaching and research interests within digital classics and digital humanities include pedagogy, professional activities, and resources for classical archaeology and epigraphy. As a member of the Forum for Classics, Libraries, and Scholarly Communication, she contributes to the FCLSC's ongoing projects to enhance catalog records and promote serendipitous discovery of classical scholars' archival papers. http://faculty.missouri.edu/buchanans/
Alex Gil is Senior Lecturer II and Associate Research Faculty of Digital Humanities in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Yale University, where he teaches introductory and advanced courses in digital humanities, and runs project-based learning and collective research initiatives. Before joining Yale, Alex served for ten years as Digital Scholarship Coordinator for the Humanities and History Division at Columbia University, and one of the founders of the Studio@Butler, a technology atelier for faculty, students and librarians. He has published in journals across the Atlantic and the Americas, while sustaining an open and robust online research presence. In 2010-2012 he was a fellow at the Scholars' Lab and NINES at the University of Virginia. He now serves as vice-chair of the Global Outlook::Digital Humanities initiative, and is actively engaged in digital humanities projects at Columbia University and around the world.
Shu Wan is currently a doctoral student in history at the University at Buffalo. He is passionate about digital humanities and its potential in providing a more inclusive and interactive research environment.
Nika M was hired as a fashion editor for the niche platform The Fashion Spot in 2010. In addition to contributing more than five-hundred original posts to the website over the course of four years, Nika worked as a research intern on special projects about feminism and pornography at n+1 before moving to Berlin to attend graduate school. While pursuing a Masters at the Freie Universität Berlin, Nika continued to work in an editorial capacity for the German startup scene and completed language coursework in German and Russian. Returning to the United States in 2017, they were a department fellow in the English department at Stanford University, where she served as the Coordinator at the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis and the Literary Lab. Their academic work has appeared in Cultural Analytics and CESTA blog, and is forthcoming in The Autoethnographer, J Journal, BeZine, and Prism Thread. In addition to the media reception of my fashion journalism, the work I completed before returning to the academy has been cited by academic writers specializing in marketing and law. I identify as a female assigned at birth and a person diagnosed.
Lavanya Dahiya is a MSc scholar in Digital Humanities at IIT Jodhpur, India. She is a sociologist who works on intersections of society and technology. With critical thinking and the ability to link the "forest" and the "trees" she excels at understanding the social and cultural world. Her research interests are digital humanities and AI, sociology of AI, visual cultures, archiving, gender studies, new media studies, intersectional studies, digital diaspora and platforms. She is a HASTAC (Humanities, Arts, Science and Technology Alliance and Collaboratory) scholar as well an active member of DHARTI (Digital Humanities Alliance for Research and Teaching Innovations, India).
Joel Lee is currently a contract researcher with the Future Projects team at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, working on digital humanities and focusing on the citizen history newspaper project History Unfolded. He was the 2021-2022 Digital Humanities Associate Fellow at the museum and before that he worked closely with the Price Lab for Digital Humanities while studying at the University of Pennsylvania.
Hoyeol Kim is a Machine Learning Data Linguist at Amazon Web Services. He received his PhD in English with a focus on computational approaches in the humanities from Texas A&M University.
Mara Oliva is an Associate Professor in modern US history and Digital Humanist at the University of Reading in the UK. She specialises in twentieth-century US foreign policy, with a focus on US soft power, Climate Change Diplomacy, City Diplomacy and the US presidency. She combines traditional historical research with digital methodology, in particular Python, R Studio, Historical GIS and 3D visualisations. She is also the Academic Champion for the newly established Digital Humanities Hub at the University of Reading. In her role, she represents researchers on the cross-service Hub team, to foster engagement with the discipline of DH across the Heritage & Creativity theme, and to shape the provision of DH support to enable researchers to acquire the skills and knowledge needed to embark upon digital research. She also contributes expertise in DH to the Hub's support for grant applications and provides more general and direct mentorship for researchers who are considering adopting digital methods or would like to know more about DH as a discipline. She convenes The Community of Practice (COP) which is open to all researchers, professional staff, and PGRs within the University of Reading.
Anke Finger is Professor of German and Media Studies and Comparative Literature at the University of Connecticut and is the co-founder and co-editor (2005-2015) of Flusser Studies, one of the first open access, multilingual, peer-reviewed online journals. She has published widely in the areas of interart studies, media studies and multimodal scholarship. The founder and inaugural director of the Digital Humanities and Media Studies (DHMS) initiative at the University of Connecticut Humanities Institute and the DHMS graduate certificate, she is particularly interested in bridging DH and media studies and in advocating digital scholarship at all levels. Recent books include Shaping the Digital Dissertation: Knowledge Production in the Arts and Humanities (edited with Virginia Kuhn, 2021, OA) and Bias, Belief and Conviction in an Age of Fake Facts (edited with Manuela Wagner, 2022, OA).
Managing Editors
The Managing Editors are responsible for managing the journal's submission, review, and production processes. They also undertake special projects as needed for the development of the journal.
- Avery Blankenship, Northeastern University
- R. B. Faure, Northeastern University
- Benjamin Grey, Northeastern University
- Alicia Svenson, Northeastern University
Development Staff
The Development Staff are responsible for the technical architecture and implementation of the journal's publication systems.
- Open Journal Systems Support: Patrick Murray-John and Karl Yee, Northeastern University
- Associate Technical Editor: Chuck Burd
- Bibliographic Systems: Ash Clark, Northeastern University
Advisory Board
Starting in 2022, the Advisory Board is being re-established along new lines. If you're interested in contributing expertise to the journal, please contact us at editors@digitalhumanities.org.
- Wendell Piez (Founding Editor)
- Melissa Terras (Founding Editor)
Former Contributors
Managing Editors:
- Cassandra Cloutier, Managing Editor
- David DeCamp, Managing Editor
- Elizabeth Hopwood, Managing Editor
- Jonathan Fitzgerald, Managing Editor
- Melanie Kohnen, Managing Editor
- Jacob Murel, Managing Editor
- Duyen Nguyen, Managing Editor
- Gregory Palermo, Managing Editor
- Matthew Peters Warne, Managing Editor
Editors:
- Michelle Dalmau, Usability Editor
- Jessica Pressman, Articles Editor
- Geoffrey Rockwell, Interactive Media Editor
- †Stéfan Sinclair, Visualization Editor
- John Unsworth, Utility Infielder
- Adriaan van deer Weel, Articles Editor
Advisory Board:
- Dino Buzzetti
- Greg Crane
- Marilyn Deegan
- Johanna Drucker
- Kurt Gärtner
- Susan Hockey
- Claus Huitfeldt
- Matthew Kirschenbaum
- Alan Liu
- Willard McCarty
- Jerome McGann
- Allen Renear
- Massimo Riva
- C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen
- John Unsworth