TY - JOUR
T1 - MECHANIZED MARGIN TO DIGITIZED CENTER
T2 - BLACK FEMINISM’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO COMBATTING ERASURE WITHIN THE DIGITAL HUMANITIES
AU - Brown, Nicole M.
AU - Mendenhall, Ruby
AU - Black, Michael L.
AU - van Moer, Mark
AU - Zerai, Assata
AU - Flynn, Karen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Edinburgh University Press 2016
PY - 2016/3
Y1 - 2016/3
N2 - Computational analysis and digital humanities are far from neutral processes and sites unimpeded by the political, social and economic context in which they emerged and are utilized. As an interdisciplinary field, the digital humanities have transformed the relationship of humans to computers broadly conceived. At the same time, the methods, theories, perspectives and the concomitant digital tools developed are being criticized for reproducing the social divisions that exist in society. The effort to recover Black women’s subjectivities from the digital minefield is not without its challenges, reflected in our study which searched approximately 800,000 books, newspapers, and articles in the HathiTrust and JSTOR Digital Libraries. The goal was to identify perceptions and lived experiences of Black women that emerged and the resulting knowledge that developed. The project team discovered multiple challenges related to the rescue and recovery of Black women’s standpoints or group knowledge. This essay explores how even as computational analysis has embedded biases, it can be utilized to recover the experiences of Black women from within the digitized record. Thus, computational analysis and all that it encompasses not only makes visible Black women’s experiences, but also expands the scope of the digital humanities.
AB - Computational analysis and digital humanities are far from neutral processes and sites unimpeded by the political, social and economic context in which they emerged and are utilized. As an interdisciplinary field, the digital humanities have transformed the relationship of humans to computers broadly conceived. At the same time, the methods, theories, perspectives and the concomitant digital tools developed are being criticized for reproducing the social divisions that exist in society. The effort to recover Black women’s subjectivities from the digital minefield is not without its challenges, reflected in our study which searched approximately 800,000 books, newspapers, and articles in the HathiTrust and JSTOR Digital Libraries. The goal was to identify perceptions and lived experiences of Black women that emerged and the resulting knowledge that developed. The project team discovered multiple challenges related to the rescue and recovery of Black women’s standpoints or group knowledge. This essay explores how even as computational analysis has embedded biases, it can be utilized to recover the experiences of Black women from within the digitized record. Thus, computational analysis and all that it encompasses not only makes visible Black women’s experiences, but also expands the scope of the digital humanities.
KW - bias
KW - black women’s live
KW - computational analysis
KW - corpora analysis
KW - feminist studies
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U2 - 10.3366/ijhac.2016.0163
DO - 10.3366/ijhac.2016.0163
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84989200521
SN - 1753-8548
VL - 10
SP - 110
EP - 125
JO - International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing
JF - International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing
IS - 1
ER -