DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly
Author Biographies
Hannah Alpert-Abrams Hannah Alpert-Abrams is a program specialist in digital humanities. She
has written on the use of technology to circulate and provide access to
multilingual documents from colonial Latin America and is the former
director of the Reading the First Books
project. Her current work focuses on using digital technology to
increase transparency and build community in higher education.
Jan-Hendrik Bakels Jan-Hendrik Bakels currently works as assistant professor at Freie Universität Berlin’s film studies department and "Cinepoetics – Center for Advanced Film Studies." He is also the principal investigator of the digital humanities project "Audio-visual rhetorics of affect," funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). He concluded his PhD research with a book on audio-visual rhythms, viewer’s affects and film-analytical methods aimed at the empirical reconstruction of audio-visual aesthetics. His research interests include audio-visual poetics, theories on affect and emotion, film-analytical methodologies, and interactive audio-visual media.
Michael Bannister Michael Bannister is an independent programmer analyst specializing in digital
humanities and internet-based instruction in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
George Aaron Broadwell George Aaron Broadwell is Elling Eide Professor of Anthropology at
University of Florida. He is a specialist in Native American languages
of the Southeastern US and Oaxaca, Mexico, with a special focus on
Choctaw, Timucua, several varieties of Zapotec, and Copala Triqui. He is
interested in the issues of integrating language description and
documentation with contemporary work in linguistic theory. He is also
committed to working with Native American communities to provide
dictionaries, texts, and other materials that are useful in language
revitalization and maintenance. He has received funding from the
National Science Foundation and IARPA. He is the author of A Choctaw Reference Grammar (2005), co-author
of The origin of the sun and moon: A Copala Triqui
legend (2009) and editor of Nana
naguan’ rihaan nij síí chihaan’ | Consejos para la gente Triqui |
Word of counsel for the Triqui people (2012).
Oksana Bulgakowa Oksana Bulgakowa, Professor emer. of Film Studies at the Gutenberg University
in Mayans, published several books on Russian and German cinema, curated
exhibits and developed multimedia projects (a website The Visual Universe of
Sergei Eisenstein, Daniel Langlois-Foundation, Montreal, 2005; DVD Factory of
Gestures, Stanford Humanities Lab, 2008, Eisenstein: My Art in Life for Google
Arts & Culture, 2017). She taught at the Humboldt University and Free
University, Berlin, Stanford, Berkeley and the International Film School in
Cologne.
Manuel Burghardt Manuel Burghardt is Professor for Computational Humanities at the Institute for Computer Science at Leipzig University. He received his PhD in Information Science in 2014, at the University of Regensburg. In his current research, Manuel ist interested in computational film studies and literary studies as well as in optical character recognition and layout detection.
Joanna Byszuk Joanna Byszuk is a researcher at the Institute of Polish Language, Polish Academy of Sciences, and a member of the Computational Stylistics Group. Her research focuses on cross-lingual and multimodal computational stylistics and advancing stylometric methodology and its understanding, especially locating their limitations and developing evaluation procedures. She is also interested in the concept of collaborative authorship and in discourse analysis in multimodal perspective, using quantitative methods to study audiovisual works. ORCID: 0000-0003-2850-2996
Sarah-Mai Dang Sarah-Mai Dang is a Postdoctoral Researcher at Philipps-Universität Marburg’s Institute of Media Studies. She received a PhD in Film Studies from Freie Universität Berlin and published her dissertation on aesthetic experience and chick flicks as a hybrid self-publishing project on her website
oabooks.de. Her current research and teaching focus on digital film historiography, data visualization, open science, feminist theory, and media aesthetics. She is the project leader of the international DFG research network
New Directions in Film Historiography (2019–2022). ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1960-247X Ralph Ewerth Ralph Ewerth is professor at the Leibniz University Hannover and head of the
Visual Analytics Research Group at TIB – Leibniz Information Centre for Science
and Technology (TIB) in Hannover, Germany; since 2016 he is also a member of
the L3S Research Center in Hannover. He received the Diploma and Ph.D. degree
in Computer Science in 2002 and 2008, respectively, both from the University of
Marburg, Germany. His research interests include automatic annotation of video
data, multimedia retrieval, and deep learning. Dr. Ewerth has published more
than 70 research papers at international conferences and journals and serves as
a technical program committee member and reviewer for various conferences and
journals.
Mariana Favila-Vázquez Doctor in Mesoamerican Studies from the National Autonomous University of
Mexico (UNAM). Since 2018, she has participated as an associate researcher in
the project Digging into Early Colonial Mexico: A
Large-Scale Computational analysis of 16th Century Historical
Sources. Her research has focused on the study of pre-Hispanic
navigation and the applications of geographic information systems for the study
of maritime cultural landscapes. She is currently doing a post-doctorate at the
Institute of Geography of UNAM with a digital humanities project focused on the
study of the Mexican landscape.
Barbara Flueckiger Barbara Flueckiger has been professor for film studies at the University of
Zurich since 2007. Before her studies in film theory and history, she worked
internationally as a film professional. Her research focuses on the interaction
between technology and aesthetics. She published two standard text books,
Sound Design and
Visual
Effects. Since 2001 she has developed and led many research
projects. In 2015 she was awarded the prestigious Advanced Grant by the
European Research Council for a research project on the technology and
aesthetics of film colors plus in 2018 a proof of concept for the development
of a multispectral, versatile film scanner.
Timeline of
Historical Film Colors:
https://filmcolors.org/
Giovanna Fossati Giovanna Fossati is a professor of Film Heritage and Digital Film Culture at
the University of Amsterdam and chief curator at Eye Filmmuseum. She recently
led The Sensory Moving Image Archive (2017-2020)
research project. Fossati is the author of From Grain to
Pixel: The Archival Life of Film in Transition (2009 and 2018),
co-author of Fantasia of Color in Early Cinema
(2015), and co-editor of Exposing the Film Apparatus: The
Film Archive as a Research Laboratory (2016) and The Colour Fantastic: Chromatic Worlds of Silent
Cinema (2018).
Moisés García Guzmán Moisés García Guzmán was born in Tlacochahuaya, Oaxaca, Mexico and is a
native speaker of Valley Zapotec. He teaches English to high school
students at CETIs #124 in Tlacolula. His education from primary school
through University was in his home state of Oaxaca. His dad was an
immigrant to the U.S. and they reunited in the U.S. after many years of
not seeing each other. After that, he lived in California for 14 years,
during which time he earned his certification to teach English back
home. It was during this time that he became a Zapotec activist and his
work includes a documentary web series (Dizhsa
Nabani, García Guzmán et al., 2018) and an online Talking
Dictionary (Lillehaugen 2019). He hopes to raise awareness on the
importance of language preservation as an element of cultural identity
in the state of Oaxaca. He serves as a board member to the Ticha
Project.
Nicole Gray Nicole Gray is a project specialist in the University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Libraries. She previously worked as a project manager and a contributing editor
for The Walt Whitman Archive. Gray received a
Ph.D. in English from the University of Texas at Austin and has published
essays on nineteenth-century American literature, archives, and book history.
She is currently finishing a M.A. in Library and Information Science at the
University of Arizona.
Ian Gregory Professor of Digital Humanities and Co-director of the Digital Humanities Hub
(
http://wp.lancs.ac.uk/dighum) at Lancaster University, UK. He has
developed GIS methods and applications to analyze historical phenomena from a
spatial perspective, including XIX century child mortality, literary
perspectives of the Lake District in the UK, etc. He has published a number of
books including:
Toward Spatial Humanities: Historical GIS
and Spatial History (with A. Geddes);
Troubled
Geographies: A spatial history of religion and society in Ireland
(with four others);
Historical GIS: Technologies,
methodologies, scholarship (with P. Ell); y
A
Place in History: A guide to using GIS in historical research, The Routledge
Companion to Spatial History (with D. DeBats and D. Lafreniere), and
Great War Lancaster: Remembering 1914-18 (with
three others).
Matthias Grotkopp Matthias Grotkopp is Assistant Professor for Digital Film Studies at "Cinepoetics – Center for Advanced Film Studies" and the Seminar for Film Studies at Freie Universität Berlin. He studied film- and theatre studies at Freie Universität Berlin and at the Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris. He wrote his dissertation on "Cinematic Poetics of Guilt" at the graduate school of the Cluster of Excellence "Languages of Emotion" (De Gruyter 2017, English translation in preparation for 2021). His research interests include genre theory and the relation of politics and poetics, the audiovisuality of climate change, the films of the so-called Berlin School as well digital methods of film analysis. He is managing editor of the open access online journal mediaesthetics.
Gaudenz Halter Gaudenz Halter has been a PhD student in data science since 2020. He has been
the developer of the VIAN video analysis and annotation software and the VIAN
WebApp in collaboration with the Visualization and MultiMedia Lab at the
University of Zurich.
Adelheid Heftberger Dr. Adelheid Heftberger is Head of Film Access at the film department of the German Federal Archive (Berlin). She obtained her PhD in Russian studies and a Masters in Comparative Literature from the University of Innsbruck and Vienna. In 2016 she has also completed Library- and Information Sciences at the Humboldt-University in Berlin. She is also a full member of the Cataloging and Documentation Commission of FIAF and active in the Open Science movement.
Eva Hielscher Eva Hielscher is a film scholar, curator and moving image
archivist. She worked for the Netherlands Institute for
Sound and Vision, Eye Filmmuseum, Fotomuseum Winterthur,
the University of Zurich and
Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Foundation. She completed her PhD
dissertation on experimental city films of the 1920s and
1930s at Ghent University and is co-editor of The City Symphony Phenomenon
(Routledge, 2018) and Color
Mania (Lars Müller, 2019). Most recently,
she has been working on an exhibition about the film and
cinema history of Hamburg at the Altonaer Museum.
Agata Hołobut Agata Hołobut is an associate professor at the Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University in Kraków. Her main areas of interest include literary and audiovisual translation, as well as visual arts and cognitive semiotics. She has written several papers on film dialogue, literary, audiovisual, and intersemiotic translation, and published, together with Monika Woźniak and Jan Rybicki, a monograph Historia na ekranie: Gatunek filmowy a przekład audiowizualny ("History on Screen: Film Genre in Audiovisual Translation," 2017).
Minh Hua Minh Hua is a recent graduate of the University of California, Santa Barbara, with a BS in Mathematical Sciences and a BA in English. He is currently an operations research analyst for the United States Air Force and pursuing an MS in Computer Science at Johns Hopkins University.
Diego Jiménez–Badillo Senior Researcher at the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH,
Mexico). Combines his expertise in Mexican Colonial History, Mesoamerican
Archaeology, Computer Science and Geographical Information Systems to develop
methodologies for the analysis and dissemination of cultural heritage. One of
his main research areas is the application of 3D computer vision and machine
learning techniques to automate the recognition, retrieval and classification
of archaeological objects, particularly from museum collections and online
repositories. His latest project focuses on data mining of texts and pictorial
documents from sixteenth century New Spain.
Lauren G. Kilroy-Ewbank Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank is the Dean of Content and Strategy for Smarthistory;
before that she was an Associate Professor of Art History at Pepperdine
University. She has published broadly on art of the art of the Spanish
Americas, the Iberian Peninsula, digital art history, and pedagogy.
Raquel Liceras-Garrido Raquel Liceras-Garrido is a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Digital
Humanities at Lancaster University. Her research focuses on two main pillars:
protohistoric archaeology and the application of digital methods to Humanities.
Focused on identities, power and landscape in the Iron Age, she completed her
PhD at Complutense University of Madrid (UCM, Spain) with the highest
qualification and the mention of European Doctor. Prior to this, she worked as
a Research Assistant at the Institute of Archaeology of Mérida (CSIC, Spain),
focusing on landscape and territory research lines, and collaborated at UCM's
Research Support Centre of Archaeometry and Archaeological Analysis (C.A.I.
A.A.A.) as a trainee Research Assistant. For 16 years, she was an active member
of the Numancia Research Archaeological Team; additionally, between 2009 and
2017, she was the Numantia fieldwork supervisor and the post-excavation manager
at UCM's Prehistory Lab. During her career, she has published more than 40
works, including books, paper in high-ranked journals and digital
resources.
Brook Danielle Lillehaugen Brook Danielle Lillehaugen is an associate professor at Haverford College
in the Tri-College Department of Linguistics. Her research profile
includes technical grammatical description as well as collaborative
language documentation and revitalization projects. She publishes on the
grammar of Zapotec languages in both their modern and historical forms
and has found combining linguistic fieldwork with tools from the digital
humanities to be a productive way to collaborate with both Zapotec
speaking communities and undergraduate students. Recent publications can
be found in the Transactions of the Philological
Society, International Journal of
American Linguistics, Language
Documentation and Conservation, and Tlalocan. Her work has been supported by the NSF, NEH, and
ACLS and she was awarded the 2018 Ernest A. Lynton Faculty Award for the
Scholarship of Engagement for Early Career Faculty.
Felipe H. Lopez Felipe H. Lopez is a postdoctoral scholar in community engaged digital
scholarship at the Haverford College Libraries. Originally from the
Zapotec town of San Lucas Quiaviní, Oaxaca, he migrated to California at
age 16, speaking no English and little Spanish. By 2007 he had earned
his Ph.D. from UCLA in urban planning. It was there that he began
working with linguists to document his language, resulting in a
trilingual Zapotec-Spanish-English dictionary (Munro and Lopez et al.,
1999). He is a Zapotec writer and poet and his work has been published
in the Latin American Literary Review,
The Acentos Review, and Latin American Literature Today. His short
story Liaza chaa
I am going home was awarded first place in the narrative category
in the 2017 Premios CaSa competition for the creation of literature in
Zapotec. He serves as a board member to the Ticha Project.
Bruno Martins Assistant professor at the Computer Science and Engineering Department of
Instituto Superior Técnico of the University of Lisbon (IST/UL), and a
researcher at the Information and Decision Support Systems Lab of INESC-ID,
where he works on problems related to the general areas of information
retrieval, text mining, and the geographical information sciences. He received
his MSc and PhD degrees from the Faculty of Sciences of the University of
Lisbon, both in Computer Science. Bruno has been involved in several research
projects related to geospatial aspects in information access and retrieval, and
he has accumulated significant expertise in addressing challenges at the
intersection of language technologies, machine learning, and the geographical
information sciences.
Eef Masson Eef Masson is a senior researcher at Rathenau Institute (the Hague), a research
for policy institute concerned with the societal impact of science and
technology. Previously, she was an assistant professor of Media Studies at the
University of Amsterdam, where she taught courses in film and media history and
media archiving and preservation, and published on non-fiction and
non-theatrical films, media archives, museum media, and practices in
data-driven research and data visualization. Until the Autumn of 2019, she was
a senior researcher in UvA’s The Sensory Moving Image
Archive research project.
Laura Matthew Laura Matthew is a historian of Spanish colonial Guatemala and associate
professor at Marquette University. She is the co-editor with Michel Oudijk of
Indian Conquistadors: Indigenous Allies in the Conquest
of Mesoamerica (2007) and the author of Memories of Conquest: Becoming Mexicano in Colonial Guatemala
(2012) as well as articles in Mesoamérica, The Journal of
Colonialism and Colonial History, and Ethnohistory.
Roman Mauer Dr. phil. Roman Mauer is a research assistant in the field of film studies at
the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. He studied film studies, literature
and ethnology in Mainz and received his doctorate in 2004 with a study on Jim
Jarmusch. He taught at the HFF Munich, dffb Berlin, HFF Konrad Wolf
Potsdam/Babelsberg and HS Mainz. Since 2008 he has organized international
lecture series and media practical cooperation projects with ZDF/arte,
Friedrich-Wilhelm-Murnau-Foundation or Deutsche Kinemathek Berlin. His main
research topics are: Aesthetics of Simultaneity, Narratology of film and
comics, Film Style, Audiovisual film didactics, methods of visualization,
Inter- and Transculturalism of Film.
Clayton McCarl Clayton McCarl is an associate professor of Spanish and Digital
Humanities at the University of North Florida (UNF). He leads
coloniaLab, a workshop for
the collaborative edition of colonial Latin American manuscripts and
rare print books, as well as the
North
Florida Editorial Workshop (NFEW), a project that focuses on
the digital transmission of archival materials related to local history.
Patricia Murrieta–Flores Co-Director of the Digital Humanities Hub at Lancaster University. Her
interests lie in the application of technologies to several Humanities fields
with a primary research focus on the Spatial Humanities. Her main focus is the
investigation of different aspects of space, place and time using a range of
technologies including GIS, NLP, Machine Learning and Corpus Linguistics
approaches. PI on the Transatlantic Platform (T-AP) funded project ‘Digging
into Early Colonial Mexico: A large-scale computational analysis of 16th
century historical sources’, and also collaborator and Co-I in multiple
projects funded by the ERC, ESRC, AHRC, HERA, and the Paul Mellon Centre among
others. Has edited and contributed to multiple books on Digital Humanities,
Cultural Heritage, the use of GIS and other technologies in Archaeology,
History, and Literature, and published multiple articles exploring theories and
methodologies related to space and place.
Christian Gosvig Olesen Christian Gosvig Olesen is a postdoctoral researcher at Utrecht University and
lecturer at the University of Amsterdam’s Media Studies Department, where he
teaches courses in film studies, media preservation, restoration and digital
heritage. For UvA’s The Sensory Moving Image
Archive project, he acted as a researcher and project manager.
Olesen’s primary research interests lie in the fields of audiovisual archiving,
digital methods and practice-based approaches in film, media and sound
studies.
Johannes Pause Matthias Zeppelzauer is a senior researcher at the Institute of Creative\Media/Technologies at St. Pölten University of Applied Sciences, Austria. He received his PhD in Computer Science from Vienna University of Technology with highest distinction. His research focuses on multimedia retrieval, audio and video analysis and machine learning in interdisciplinary problem domains.
May Helena Plumb May Helena Plumb is a PhD Candidate in Linguistics at the University of
Texas at Austin, where she is an NSF Graduate Research Fellow and a
Donald D. Harrington Graduate Fellow. May’s research focuses on the
documentation and description of Zapotec languages, and her most recent
work investigates the expression of temporal-modal semantics in
Tlacochahuaya Zapotec.
Kader Pustu-Iren Kader Pustu-Iren completed her studies of computer science at the Leibniz
University Hannover and received her master's degree in November 2017. Since
January 2018 she has been working as a research associate in the Visual
Analytics research group at the Technical University Information Library (TIB).
Within the project "Visual Information Search in
Video-Archives" she works on person recognition and information
visualization.
Rita Raley Rita Raley is an Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She researches and teaches in the areas of new media studies, electronic literature, and the digital humanities.
Jan Rybicki Jan Rybicki is an associate professor at the Institute of English Studies, Jagiellonian University in Kraków. With a background in English literary studies, comparative literature and translation studies, he has published on stylometry in translation ("The Great Mystery of the (Almost) Invisible Translator: Stylometry in Translation"), authorship attribution ("Partners in Life, Partners in Crime?") and gender ("Vive la différence: Tracing the (Authorial) Gender Signal by Multivariate Analysis of Word Frequencies"). His latest papers include attributive work on Harper Lee and Elena Ferrante. He helped write the stylo package for R. A literary translator in his previous lifetime, he translated into Polish such authors as Golding, Gordimer, Fitzgerald, Ishiguro or le Carré
Mercedes I. Salomón Salazar Directora de la Biblioteca Histórica José María Lafragua de la Benemérita
Universidad Autónoma de Puebla (México). Licenciada en Humanidades y
Maestra en Diseño de la Información por la Universidad de las Américas,
Puebla (1989, 2020). Máster en Conservación y Restauración de Bienes
Muebles por el
Istituto per l’Arte e il Restauro
Palazzo Spinelli, (Italia, 2003). Coordinadora del "Catálogo Colectivo de Marcas de Fuego". Temas
de investigación: la imprenta en Puebla, las Marcas de Fuego y la
Academia de Bellas Artes de Puebla.
Coautora con Andrew Green de "Las Marcas de Fuego:
propuesta de una metodología para su identificación" en el
libro: Leer en tiempos de la Colonia imprenta,
bibliotecas y lectores en América (2010). "Las Marcas de Fuego, una tipología más para el
estudio de procedencias" en Propiedad y
Uso. Exlibris, marcas de fuego, sellos y anotaciones
manuscritas (2019). En prensa, el artículo "Materialidad e imagen: caracterización y registro 3D
de un sello metálico de manufactura colonial usado para marcar
libros con fuego" en coautoría con José Luis Ruvalcaba Sil,
Alejandro Mitrani y Edgar Casanova en Del Ductus al
xml.
Thomas Scherer Thomas Scherer is junior researcher in the digital-humanities project "Audio-visual rhetorics of affect" funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) situated at the Freie Universität Berlin and the Hasso Plattner Institute Potsdam (Germany). He is co-editor of Cinematic Metaphor in Perspective. Reflections on a Transdisciplinary Framework (de Gruyter 2018) and collaborating author of Cinematic Metaphor. Experience– Affectivity – Temporality (Müller & Kappelhoff, De Gruyter 2018). Scherer’s research interests include the aesthetics and poetics of utility films and TV news, digital research methods in film studies, as well as audiovisual rhetorics.
Julian Sittel Julian Sittel M.A. is a PhD student and research associate at the Institute of
Film Studies at the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz. His current research
focus is on quantitative film analysis and theory as well as cognitivist film
theory. Prior to that he studied philosophy and film studies in Mainz. His
master's thesis dealt with the topic "The systematic
application of computer-based methods in film studies."
Emma Slayton Emma Slayton is the Data Curation, Visualization, and GIS specialist at
Carnegie Mellon University Libraries. She obtained an MPhil from the
University of Oxford in 2013 and completed her Ph.D. at the Faculty of
Archaeology, Leiden University in 2018. Her current work centers around
improving and supporting digital literacy efforts, as well as using
computer models to look at possible past sea routes routes connecting
island communities. Orcid ID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2230-3101.
Richard Snyder Richard Snyder is a PhD Candidate at Washington State University
Vancouver
Jasper Stratil Jasper Stratil is junior researcher in the digital-humanities project "Audio-visual rhetorics of affect" funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) situated at the Freie Universität Berlin and the Hasso Plattner Institute Potsdam (Germany). He published in MontageAV, [in]transition and mediaesthetics. His research interests include audiovisual poetics & rhetorics, documentary & genre, videographic criticism and digital research methods in film studies.
Nanne van Noord Nanne van Noord is a researcher at the University of Amsterdam and the
Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision. His research focuses on developing
new computer vision methods that push the state of the art in a manner that is
informed by and relevant to humanities research. He holds a PhD from Tilburg
University for his thesis on learning visual representations of style and he
has previously worked as a researcher for The Sensory
Moving Image Archive project.
Niels-Oliver Walkowski Niels-Oliver Walkowski is a research scientist for digital literacy and research at the University of Luxembourg. He received his PhD in Literature from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, writing about the impact of digital technologies on scholarly publishing. He wrote several articles about colorimetric analysis of zombie movies and political thrillers and is the project coordinator of Melusina Press, a hybrid, multimodal press for research in Luxembourg.
Mike Zarafonetis Mike Zarafonetis is the Coordinator for Digital Scholarship and Research
Services at Haverford College Libraries. He earned his PhD in US History
at Auburn University in 2010, and entered libraries and the field of
Digital Scholarship in 2011. As the head of a leading liberal arts
digital scholarship program, he is interested in the intersections of
technology, research, and pedagogy, and in exploring new ways for
engaging communities and students in digital scholarship.
Matthias Zeppelzauer Matthias Zeppelzauer is a senior researcher at the Institute of Creative\Media/Technologies at St. Pölten University of Applied Sciences, Austria. He received his PhD in Computer Science from Vienna University of Technology with highest distinction. His research focuses on multimedia retrieval, audio and video analysis and machine learning in interdisciplinary problem domains.