Digital Humanities Quarterly: Difference between revisions
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=Digital Humanities Quarterly (DHQ)= | |||
==Available== | |||
* http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/ | * http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/ | ||
==Description== | ==Description== | ||
(to | From the journal website (Accessed 2016-01-29): | ||
:'''Digital Humanities Quarterly''' (DHQ), an open-access, peer-reviewed, digital journal covering all aspects of digital media in the humanities. Published by the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO), DHQ is also a community experiment in journal publication, with a commitment to: | |||
* experimenting with publication formats and the rhetoric of digital authoring | |||
* co-publishing articles with Literary and Linguistic Computing (a well-established print digital humanities journal) in ways that straddle the print/digital divide | |||
* using open standards to deliver journal content | |||
* developing translation services and multilingual reviewing in keeping with the strongly international character of ADHO | |||
:DHQ publishes a wide range of peer-reviewed materials, including: | |||
* Scholarly articles | |||
* Editorials and provocative opinion pieces | |||
* Experiments in interactive media | |||
* Reviews of books, web sites, new media art installations, digital humanities systems and tools | |||
:Materials published in DHQ appear in the Preview area as soon as they are ready, with announcements marking the release of each new issue, roughly at quarterly intervals. | |||
==See especially== | ==See especially== |
Revision as of 15:24, 29 January 2016
Digital Humanities Quarterly (DHQ)
Available
Description
From the journal website (Accessed 2016-01-29):
- Digital Humanities Quarterly (DHQ), an open-access, peer-reviewed, digital journal covering all aspects of digital media in the humanities. Published by the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO), DHQ is also a community experiment in journal publication, with a commitment to:
- experimenting with publication formats and the rhetoric of digital authoring
- co-publishing articles with Literary and Linguistic Computing (a well-established print digital humanities journal) in ways that straddle the print/digital divide
- using open standards to deliver journal content
- developing translation services and multilingual reviewing in keeping with the strongly international character of ADHO
- DHQ publishes a wide range of peer-reviewed materials, including:
- Scholarly articles
- Editorials and provocative opinion pieces
- Experiments in interactive media
- Reviews of books, web sites, new media art installations, digital humanities systems and tools
- Materials published in DHQ appear in the Preview area as soon as they are ready, with announcements marking the release of each new issue, roughly at quarterly intervals.
See especially
- Gregory Crane and Melissa Terras (eds), Changing the Center of Gravity: Transforming Classical Studies Through Cyberinfrastructure, Digital Humanities Quarterly 3/1 (2009), http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/vol/003/1/