We define digital scholarship broadly to include tools like GIS and text mining databases, platforms like open access publishing and digital archives, and emerging interdisciplinary movements like the digital humanities.
Our work has been informed, in part, by William Pannapacker’s article,“Stop Calling It ‘Digital Humanities’,” Debates in the Digital Humanities, the Journal of Digital Humanities, Digital Humanities Now, and the work of the Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media.