2020 Updates
Wishing you a restful, joyful, and healthy holiday season and 2021!
Six months after the Center for Digital Humanities wrapped up our collaboration with the Princeton Ethiopian Miracles of Mary Project (PEMM)—or የፕሪንስተን የኢትዮጵያ ተዓምራተ ማርያም ፕሮጀክት, in Amharic—the PEMM team is hard at work buildi…
Like scholars across all of academia, Slavic digital humanists have been forced to transition into a virtual space over the past few months. Perhaps appropriately, much of our work has been devoted to digitizing a slate of R…
CDH project management have evolved to meet new challenges, including a new research partnership chartered fully remotely and an experimental, genre-defying internal project.
“Preserving Black Histories, Cultivating Black Futures” featured Jennifer Garcon (UPenn), along with Synatra Smith (Philadelphia Museum of Art) and Amanda Henley (UNC-Chapel Hill), both of whom presented projects related to …
Students registering for spring courses this week can choose from a wide variety of offerings exploring how digital and computational methods illuminate the humanities.
The list includes course offerings that deal with topics at the intersection of technology and culture, provide hands-on computational instruction, and/or give students the opportunity to consider the value of digital humani…
Dates and temporality are complicated. Historians intuitively handle them in complex ways, but articulating that complexity can be challenging.
Registration is open for Wintersession offerings relevant to the work we do at CDH, including sessions on design, data visualization and databases, innovative research strategies, coding, and digital activism.
Fraga's work shows how historians can use DH to gain big-picture insights from archival materials.
Through the UAF Program, run by the Graduate School, graduate students gain work experience throughout the University.
"Startwords," an online publication, made its debut on Tuesday, and it aims to be anything but commonplace.