Digital Humanities Working Group
The Digital Humanities Working Group offers a space for faculty and advanced graduate students to present works-in-progress for feedback before submitting their work to an external conference, journal or grant body.
The Digital Humanities Working Group offers a space for faculty and advanced graduate students to present works-in-progress for feedback before submitting their work to an external conference, journal or grant body.
The Humanities Digital Workshop will be debuting a weekly drop-in clinic for graduate students who use, or would like to use, digital or computational elements in their humanities-based research.
Principal Investigator: Lynne Tatlock, Washington University in St. Louis. One year after its first publication in London in 1847, Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre first appeared in both English and in German translation in the German-language print domain, and over the next sixty years the novel circulated widely in the German-language print domain