In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Contributors

Maria Antoniak is a Young Investigator at the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence on the Semantic Scholar team. Her research is in natural language processing and cultural analytics. She earned her PhD in Information Science from Cornell University and has a master's degree in Computational Linguistics from the University of Washington, and she has worked as a research intern at Microsoft Research, Twitter Cortex, Facebook Core Data Science, and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

Sunyam Bagga is an NLP Researcher at Noah's Ark Lab Canada. His research interests lie at the intersection of natural language processing and digital humanities. Prior to joining Noah's Ark Lab, he was a Research Consultant at .txtLAB at McGill University, where he also obtained his master's degree in Computer Science.

Katherine Bode is Professor of Literary and Textual Studies at the Australian National University. A World of Fiction: Digital Collections and the Future of Literary History (2018) is her most recent book.

Alison Booth is Professor of English and Academic Director of DH Centers, University of Virginia. Her digital project on prosopography, Collective Biographies of Women, is supported by ACLS, NEH, and UVA's English Department and Library. Her most recent book is Homes and Haunts: Touring Writers' Shrines and Countries (2016). She coedited "Varieties of Digital Humanities" (PMLA 2020) with Miriam Posner.

Sarah Bruno is the 2022-2023 Postdoctoral Fellow in Latinx Art, Cultures, and Religions in the Humanities Research Center at Rice University. Bruno's research and art lie at the intersections of ethnography, performance, diaspora, and digitality. She is currently working on her first book project, using the Afro-Puerto Rican genre of bomba as a site and method in constructing a cartography of Black Puerto Rican emotions throughout history.

Clayton Childress is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at University of British Columbia. His work on taste-, decision-, and meaning-making has been published in American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology, Sociological Science, Sociological Forum, Poetics, Cultural Sociology, and other venues. He is the author of Under the Cover: The Creation, Production, and Reception of a Novel (2017).

Michael Gavin is Associate Professor of English at the University of South Carolina. He is author of The Invention of English Criticism, 1650–1760 (2015) and Literary Mathematics: Quantitative Theory for Textual Studies (2023).

N. Katherine Hayles, James B. Duke Professor of Literature Emerita at Duke University and Distinguished Research Professor of English at the University of California, Los Angeles, teaches and writes on the relations of literature, science, and technology in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. She has published ten books and over one-hundred peer-reviewed articles, and she is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Her most recent books are Unthought: The Power of the Cognitive Nonconscious (2017) and Postprint: Books and Becoming Computational (2021).

Jessica Marie Johnson is Associate Professor in the Department of History at Johns Hopkins University and a former fellow at the Hutchins Center for African and African American Studies at Harvard University. Johnson is a historian of Atlantic slavery and the Atlantic African diaspora. She is the author of Wicked Flesh: Black Women, Intimacy, and Freedom in the Atlantic World (2020).

Long Le-Khac is Assistant Professor of English at Loyola University Chicago. He is the author of Giving Form to an Asian and Latinx America (2020). He is currently working on a second book project titled Racial Entanglements: Racialization across Groups, Species, Things, and Environments and a digital project, The Asian American Literary Corpus.

Caroline Levine is David and Kathleen Ryan Professor of the Humanities at Cornell University and author of four books, including Forms: Whole, Rhythm, Hierarchy, Network (2015). Her most recent book, The Activist Humanist: Form and Method in the Climate Crisis, will appear in 2023.

Hoyt Long is Professor of Japanese Literature at the University of Chicago. He is the author of The Values in Numbers: Reading Japanese Literature in a Global Information Age (2021). His current research interests include machine translation, computational approaches to world literature...

pdf

Share