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		<title>Digital Humanities Questions &#38; Answers &#187; Topic: 2-3 DH Articles for a survey of Literary Criticism</title>
		<link>http://digitalhumanities.org/answers/topic/2-3-dh-articles-for-a-survey-of-literary-criticism</link>
		<description>Digital Humanities Questions &amp; Answers &#187; Topic: 2-3 DH Articles for a survey of Literary Criticism</description>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 25 May 2013 13:02:36 +0000</pubDate>
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				<title>cforster on "2-3 DH Articles for a survey of Literary Criticism"</title>
						<link>http://digitalhumanities.org/answers/topic/2-3-dh-articles-for-a-survey-of-literary-criticism#post-901</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 17:47:11 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>cforster</dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">901@http://digitalhumanities.org/answers/</guid>
			<description>&#60;p&#62;&#60;em&#62;Replying to @&#60;a href='http://digitalhumanities.org/answers/profile/ryan'&#62;Ryan&#60;/a&#62; Cordell's &#60;a href=&#34;http://digitalhumanities.org/answers/topic/2-3-dh-articles-for-a-survey-of-literary-criticism#post-899&#34;&#62;post&#60;/a&#62;:&#60;/em&#62;&#60;/p&#62;
&#60;p&#62;So these are perhaps unsurprising suggestions given our mutual UVA pedigree, but I think something of Jerome McGann's makes a lot of sense. I know folks have actually used games of IVANHOE (played in class, on paper, or via blogs) with some success (though I'm too timid to do that). Something from &#60;em&#62;Radiant Textuality&#60;/em&#62; makes sense. These pieces are available online:&#60;/p&#62;
&#60;ul&#62;
&#60;li&#62;&#60;a href=&#34;http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jjm2f/blackwell.htm&#34;&#62;Marking Texts in Many Dimensions&#60;/a&#62;&#60;/li&#62;
&#60;li&#62;&#60;a href=&#34;http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jjm2f/old/deform.html&#34;&#62;Deformance and Interpretation&#60;/a&#62;&#60;/li&#62;
&#60;/ul&#62;
&#60;p&#62;&#60;em&#62;&#60;strong&#62;EDIT:&#60;/strong&#62; Added five minutes later when this, also rather unoriginal, thought occurred to me:&#60;/em&#62; Something from Franco Moretti's &#60;em&#62;Graphs, Maps, and Trees&#60;/em&#62; could work well I think (or even the whole book; it is delightfully short).
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				<title>Ryan Cordell on "2-3 DH Articles for a survey of Literary Criticism"</title>
						<link>http://digitalhumanities.org/answers/topic/2-3-dh-articles-for-a-survey-of-literary-criticism#post-899</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 15:47:51 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>Ryan Cordell</dc:creator>
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			<description>&#60;p&#62;This spring I'm teaching a survey of literary criticism. We need to cover many of the major movements during the semester, and I will only have 1 week to devote to DH. I do, however, want my students to be aware of this increasingly influential field--and, of course, the field I'm most interested in myself.&#60;/p&#62;
&#60;p&#62;What 2-3 articles would you include in such a survey? They'd need to be fairly broad--for students who aren't necessarily interested in DH (at least not yet). Stephen Ramsay's &#34;Algorithmic Criticism&#34; (&#60;a href=&#34;http://tiny.cc/d81s6&#34; rel=&#34;nofollow&#34;&#62;http://tiny.cc/d81s6&#60;/a&#62;) was suggested on Twitter. Other ideas?
&#60;/p&#62;</description>
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