Feminist Digital Humanities

Intersections in Practice
Author: Edited by Lisa Marie Rhody and Susan Schreibman
The tools, alternative infrastructures, and liberatory teaching practices transforming digital humanities
Cloth – $110
978-0-252-04642-1
Paper – $28
978-0-252-08850-6
eBook – $19.95
978-0-252-04773-2
Publication Date
Paperback: 04/08/2025
Cloth: 04/08/2025
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About the Book

Feminist digital humanities offers opportunities for exploring, exposing, and revaluing marginalized forms of knowledge and enacting new processes for creating meaning. Lisa Marie Rhody and Susan Schreibman present essays that explore digital humanities practice as rich terrain for feminist creativity and critique.

The editors divide the works into three categories. In the first section, contributors offer readings that demonstrate how feminist thought can be put into operation through digital practice or via analytical approaches, methodologies, and interpretations. A second section structured around infrastructure considers how technologies of knowledge creation, publication, access, and sharing can be formed or reformed through feminist values. The final section focuses on pedagogies and proposes feminist strategies for preparing students to become critical and confident readers with and against technologies.

Aimed at readers in and out of the classroom, Feminist Digital Humanities reveals the many ways scholars have pushed beyond critique to practice digital humanities in new ways.

Contributors: Daniela Agostinho, Monika Barget, Jenny Bergenmar, Susan Brown, Tanya E Clement, Katrine Dirckinck-Holmfeld, Jaime Lee Kirtz, Cecilia Lindhé, Laura Mandell, Lisa Marie Rhody, Mark Sample, Susan Schreibman, Andie Silva, Nikko L. Stevens, Ravynn K. Stringfield, Dhanashree Thorat, Nanna Bonde Thylstrup, Kristin Veel, Astrid von Rosen, and Jacqueline Wernimont

About the Author

Lisa Marie Rhody is Director of the Digital Humanities Research Institute and Deputy Director of Digital Initiatives at the CUNY Graduate Center. Susan Schreibman is a professor of digital arts and culture at Maastricht University. She is a coeditor of the New Companion to Digital Humanities, 2nd edition.

Reviews


Blurbs

“Theory becomes practice and practice becomes theory in this essential new volume. Across audio and images, datasets and infrastructures, classrooms and co-ops, Feminist Digital Humanities continually affirms the generative contribution and liberatory potential of feminism for the field.”--Lauren F. Klein, coauthor of Data Feminism