A collection that explores the processes of making within the digital
humanities.
On Making in the Digital Humanities fills a gap in our understanding
of digital humanities projects and craft by exploring the processes of
making as much as the products that arise from it. Focusing on the
interwoven layers of human and technological textures that constitute
digital humanities scholarship, it assembles a group of well-known,
experienced, and emerging scholars in the digital humanities to reflect
on various forms of making. The chapters gathered here are individually
important, but together provide a very human view of what it is to do
the digital humanities, in the past, present, and future. This book will
accordingly be of interest to researchers, teachers, and students of the
digital humanities; creative humanities, including maker spaces and
culture; information studies; the history of computing and technology;
and the history of science and the humanities.