DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly
Author Biographies
Katrina Anderson Katrina Anderson graduated from Simon Fraser University with a MA in
English, specializing in Print Culture. Her research interests include
Television Studies and 20th Century Canadian Fiction. She currently
works as a Production Assistant in Vancouver's film and television
industry.
Lindsey Bannister Lindsey Bannister is a doctoral student at Simon Fraser University. Her
current research delves into racial performance, citizenship, and
popular culture in early Twentieth Century Canadian Literature. To
date, she has discovered many strange and remarkable facets of Canadian
literary culture through her dissertation research and through her
position as Research Assistant for the Canada's Early Women Writer's
Project, a seed project of the Canadian Writing Research
Collaboratory.
John F. Barber convenes with the faculty of Creative Media & Digital Culture at
Washington State University Vancouver. As part of his interest in sound,
Barber developed and maintains Radio Nouspace (http://www.radionouspace.net), a web-based radio station,
interactive installation / performance work, practice-based research
site, and virtual museum, all focused on sound as a primary component of
digital narrative, drama, and storytelling. His radio+sound art work has
been broadcast internationally, and featured in juried exhibitions in
America, Canada, Germany, Portugal, and Macedonia. A recent multimedia
performance installation with voice is "Remembering
the Dead," an elegiac piece that speaks the names of victims
of intentional gun violence in America in 2015 (http://dtc-wsuv.org/remembering-the-dead).
Alan Bilansky Alan Bilansky is completing an MS in Library and Information Science at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, after earning a PhD in
Rhetoric and Democracy form Penn State. At the U of I he has taught
undergraduates in social aspects of information technology, and also
consults with faculty. He is currently at work studying the
institutional, social and material history of databases like EEBO and
ECCO and how they affect scholarly practice.
Luise Borek
Janey Dodd Janey Dodd is a doctoral student in English at the University of British
Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. Her research focuses on post-war North
American poetry and poetics, and the intersections between site-specific
performance, spatial practice, and theories of the archive.
Quinn Dombrowski Digital Humanities Coordinator, Research IT
Douglas Ernest Duhaime Douglas Duhaime studies eighteenth-century British fiction, the history
of science, and computational approaches to literary history. A
recipient of the James A. Sappenfield Fellowship (2010) and the
Frederick J. Hoffman Award (2011), he recently participated in the
NEH-sponsored "Early Modern Digital Agendas"
(2013), a research summit on computational approaches to early modern
English literature and history. At Notre Dame, he has taught courses
with the Writing and Rhetoric Department, and has served as Assistant
Editor for Early American Literature.
Lindsey Eckert Lindsey Eckert is an Assistant Professor in the Department of English at
Georgia State University where she teaches courses in Romanticism and
Digital Humanities. Her work has recently appeared in Nineteenth-Century
Literature and European Romantic Review. She is currently working on a
monograph entitled Loving Strangers: Romantic
Authorship and the Limits of Familiarity.
Renée Farrar Renée Farrar is an Instructor of English at the United States Military
Academy at West Point and an Army captain. She has published several
digital, concrete poems with Technoculture and Digital America. Her work
focuses on social systems of control exerted through digital media.
Deanna Fong Deanna Fong is a doctoral student at Simon Fraser University in
Vancouver, Canada, where her research focuses on performance, audio
archives, literary communities and intellectual property.
Stefania Forlini Stefania Forlini is an Associate Professor in the Department of English
at the University of Calgary. Her research focuses on late Victorian
literature and culture, especially the early evolution of science
fiction, fin-de-siècle science, aesthetics, and material culture. Her
articles have appeared or are forthcoming in Neo-Victorian Studies, English
Literature and Transition, 1880-1920, Bodies and Things in Nineteenth-Century Literature and
Culture (Palgrave), IEEE Transactions
on Visualization and Computer Graphics, and Like Clockwork: Essays on Steampunk
(Minnesota).
Mary Galvin Mary Galvin (@galvinmary) is a PhD Candidate at
University College Cork. She is based in the School
of Applied Psychology, and her research involves an
experience centered design inquiry into the patient
and caregiver relationship, in the context of
dementia. It explores the potential of digital
technologies to support positive interactions within
the home. She has been involved in the exploration
of digital technologies within different settings,
such as healthcare and the arts and humanities. Her
background lies within psychology and HCI, and her
passion is people – being curious about them,
empathically co-designing with them, and
articulating their voices in a way that gives
insight to future design and most importantly future
wellbeing. See http://marygalvin.org for more.
Chelsea Gardner Chelsea Gardner is a PhD candidate in Classical
Archaeology at the University of British Columbia.
As one of the project managers of From Stone to
Screen, Chelsea uploaded and edited the metadata for
the online collection of epigraphic squeezes, and
has headed several international collaborations for
the project. Her dissertation work focuses on
cultural identity in the Mani peninsula of southern
Greece.
Julia Grandison Julia Grandison studies nineteenth-century literature and book history.
Her book project and her current digital project focus on communal and
individual conceptions of time and space in nineteenth-century novels
and other print genres.
Uta Hinrichs Uta Hinrichs is a Lecturer at the University of St Andrews, Scotland, UK
with the SACHI research group. She holds a PhD in Computational Media
Design from the University of Calgary. Uta's research is at the
intersection of visualization, HCI, design, the humanities, and art. Her
work focuses on designing and studying the use and experience of
interactive systems that facilitate the exploration and analysis of
(cultural) data collections from academic, leisurely, and artistic
perspectives.
Diane Jakacki Diane Jakacki is the Digital Scholarship Coordinator
at Bucknell University, where she explores and
institutes ways in which Digital Humanities tools
and methodologies can be leveraged in a small
liberal arts environment. She earned her PhD at the
University of Waterloo, then took up a Marion L.
Brittain Postdoctoral Fellowship at Georgia Tech.
Her research specialties include digital humanities
methodologies as applied to early modern British
literature and drama, visual rhetoric, and the ways
in which pedagogy can be transformed by means of
digital interventions. She is an assistant director
of the Digital Humanities Summer Institute, the
Technical Editor for the Internet Shakespeare
Editions, a member of the Executive Board of the
Records of Early English Drama and the pedagogical
advisory board for Map of Early Modern London
project. She is currently editing King Henry VIII
for the Internet Shakespeare Editions.
Michelle Levy Michelle Levy is an Associate Professor of English at Simon Fraser
University. She works in the fields of British Romanticism, feminist
literary history, book history, and digital humanities. Her current
research examines the intersections of manuscript, print, and digital
media.
Gwynaeth McIntyre Gwynaeth McIntyre (Lecturer, University of Otago) was
the faculty advisor on the student-launched
digitization project entitled From Stone to Screen from 2013-2015.
Her main role in this project was overseeing the
development of teaching modules to help incorporate
the study of primary sources into language, history,
society, and archaeology courses at the university
level. Her research and teaching interests include
Greek and Roman history, mythology and religion and
ancient epigraphy.
Bridget Moynihan Bridget Moynihan earned her MA from the University of Calgary and is
currently a PhD candidate in English at the University of Edinburgh. She
has a passion for printed texts that push the boundaries of what it
means to “be” a book, whether in the context of artists books,
experimental texts, or archives of ephemera, and is fascinated by the
role of digital media in both cultural institutions and imaginations.
Her dissertation research focuses on the material, cultural, and digital
interpretation of the scrapbooks of Scottish poet Edwin Morgan.
James O’Sullivan James O’Sullivan (@jamescosullivan) works as a digital humanist at the University of Sheffield's Humanities Research Institute. Primarily, James’ own research focuses
on the poetics of electronic literature, as well as
on the use of computational approaches to literary
criticism. His work has been published in a variety
of interdisciplinary journals, and he is the editor
of a number of forthcoming collections of essays.
James was shortlisted for the Fortier Prize in 2014,
the year in which he also received an Honorable
Mention in the CSDH/SCHN Ian Lancashire Award. James
is Chair of the DHSI Colloquium at the University of
Victoria, a member of the Association for Computers
and the Humanities’ Standing Committee on
Affiliates, a Communications Fellow of the European
Association for Digital Humanities, and an appointed
member of the ADHO’s Global Outlook::Digital
Humanities Executive. He is also a published poet,
and the founder of New Binary Press. Further
information on James and his work can be found at
http://josullivan.org.
Jody Perkins
Christof Schöch
Lindsey Seatter Lindsey Seatter is a doctoral student in the department of English at the
University of Victoria and the Graduate Research Assistant in the
Electronic Textual Cultures Lab. Her research interests include
Romanticism, women writers, narratology, distant reading, and social
editing practices.
Kevin G. Smith Kevin G. Smith is a doctoral candidate in the English Department at
Northeastern University. He has been a fellow at the NULab for Texts,
Maps, and Networks at Northeastern and is currently serving as Editorial
Assistant for Research in the Teaching of English. His research focuses
on intersections between digital humanities and rhetoric and
composition, especially new media, digital pedagogy and digital writing
practices. His prospective dissertation will study schema development
and the use of markup for authoring in undergraduate composition
courses.
Lisa Tweten Lisa Tweten has recently graduated from the
Classical, Near Eastern and Religious Studies
department at the University of British Columbia
with a Masters degree in the Ancient Cultures,
Religion, and Ethnicity program. As one of the
project managers of From Stone to Screen, Lisa
photographed and edited the digital collection of
epigraphic squeezes, and has continued to work on
the content management and database for the project
with the Digital Initiatives branch of the UBC
library.
Jeffrey Charles Witt Jeffrey C. Witt is an assistant professor of philosophy at Loyola
University Maryland. He is the founder, designer, and developer of the
Sentences Commentary Text Archive and
the LombardPress web publication system. He
is working on several editions of previously unedited Latin texts,
aiming to make them freely available and searchable on the web. He sits
on the advisory board of the Digital Latin Library and Vatican Film
Library Preservation and Access Digitization Project. He was recently
awarded a Visiting Research Fellowship at the Schoenberg Institute for
Manuscript Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Witt completed
his graduate work in the philosophy department at Boston College in the
spring of 2012. His dissertation focused on issues of faith, reason, and
theological knowledge in late medieval Sentences commentaries. He is the co-editor of The Theology of John Mair (Brill, 2015) and
co-author of the monograph, Robert Holcot
(Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2016), an introduction to the
thought of the 14th century philosopher and theologian Robert
Holcot.