Authors
Susan Brown, Klara du Plessis, Kiera Obbard, Andrea Zeffiro, Eric Schmaltz, Katherine McLeod, Asen Ivanov, Rashmeet Kaur, Kim Martin, Allan Cho, Pascale Dangoisse, Paul Barrett, David Gaertner, Constance Crompton, Michelle Schwartz, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Sarah Roger, Jon Saklofske, Dean Irvine, Deanna Fong, Graham H. Jensen, Mark V. Campbell, Dani Spinosa, Gregory Betts, Sarah Zhang, Sandra Djwa, Julia Polyck-O’Neill, Kendra Cowley, Roopika Risam
- Pages
- 458
- Published in
- Ottawa, CA
Table of Contents
- Cover 1
- Halftitle Page 2
- Title Page 4
- Copyright 5
- Contents 8
- Abstract 12
- List of Figures 14
- Acknowledgements 16
- Chapter 1: Digital Canadas? Transforming the Nation 18
- Part 1. Situating and Disrupting Digital Scholarship 34
- Chapter 2: Where Is the Nation in Digital Humanities, Revisited 36
- Chapter 3: Rerouting Digital (Humanities) Scholarship in Canada 46
- Chapter 4: Closed, Open, Stopped: Indigenous Sovereignty and the Possibility of Decolonial Digital Humanities 66
- Chapter 5: “This Game Needs to Be Made”: Playable Theories ⇌ Virtual Worlds 92
- Chapter 6: Reimagining Representational Codes in Data Visualization: What Contemporary Digital Humanities Might Learn from Visual Arts-Based Disciplines 110
- Chapter 7: Making, Conversation: An Experiment in Public Digital Humanities 128
- Part 2. Digital Poetics 148
- Chapter 8: Canadian Poetry and the Computational Concordance: Sandra Djwa and the Early History of Canadian Humanities Computing 150
- Chapter 9: Canadian Poetry and the Computer 166
- Chapter 10: “Saga Uv Th Relees Uv Huuman Spirit from Compuewterr Funckshuns”: Space Conquest, IBM, and the Anti-Digital Anxiety of Early Canadian Digital Poetics (1960–1968) 178
- Chapter 11: The Digits in the Digital: Bodies in the Machines of Canadian Concrete Poetry 198
- Chapter 12: Nations of Touch: The Politics of Electronic Literature as Digital Humanities 220
- Chapter 13: Stop Words 238
- Part 3. Digital Canadian Archives 254
- Chapter 14: Wages Due Both Then and Now 256
- Chapter 15: Analog Thrills, Digital Spills: On the Fred Wah Digital Archive Version 2.0 272
- Chapter 16: Humanizing the Archive: The Potential of Hip-Hop Archives in the Digital Humanities 290
- Chapter 17: Sounding Digital Humanities 308
- Chapter 18: Linking Out: The Long Now of Digital Humanities Infrastructures 332
- Chapter 19: Unsettling Colonial Mapping: Sonic-Spatial Representations of Amiskwaciwâskahikan 366
- Chapter 20: Beyond “Mere Digitization”: Introducing the Canadian Modernist Magazines Project 384
- Chapter 21: A Legacy of Race and Data: Mining the History of Exclusion 406
- Chapter 22: Afterword: The Landscape and the Horizon 424
- Contributors 442
- Index 450
- Canadian Literature Collection / Collection De Littérature Canadienne 458
- Backcover 459