This book addresses the application of computing to cultural heritage
and the discipline of Digital Humanities that formed around it. Digital
Humanities research is transforming how the Human record can be
transmitted, shaped, understood, questioned and imagined and it has been
ongoing for more than 70 years. However, we have no comprehensive
histories of its research trajectory or its disciplinary development.
The authors make a first contribution towards remedying this by
uncovering, documenting, and analysing a number of the social,
intellectual and creative processes that helped to shape this research
from the 1950s until the present day.
By taking an oral history approach, this book explores questions like,
among others, researchers' earliest memories of encountering computers
and the factors that subsequently prompted them to use the computer in
Humanities research.
Computation and the Humanities will be an essential read for cultural
and computing historians, digital humanists and those interested in
developments like the digitisation of cultural heritage and artefacts.
This book is open access under a CC BY-NC 2.5 license