Centers, Initiatives, Programs, Websites
Digital Humanities takes many organizational forms at small liberal arts colleges, ranging from centers to initiatives to working groups to one dedicated scholar. This page indexes and links to the web presence of digital humanities at small liberal arts colleges within the NITLEnetwork. For more information on digital humanities centers, see:
Zorich, Diane. A Survey of Digital Humanities Centers in the United States. Washington D.C.: Council on Library and Information Resources, 2008.
Small Liberal Arts Colleges
Austin College, Digital Humanities
Bryn Mawr, Haverford and Swarthmore Colleges, Tri-Co Digital Humanities Initiative
Bryn Mawr College: Albert M. Greenfield Digital Center for the History of Women’s Education
Carleton College: Digital Humanities at Carleton
Claremont University Consortium (Claremont-McKenna, Harvey-Mudd, Pitzer, Pomona, Scripps): Claremont DH (blog on planning Claremont Center for Digital Humanities)
Davidson College, Scholarship in the Digital Age
Dickinson College, Digital Humanities at Dickinson College
Five Colleges Digital Humanities (includes Amherst, Hampshire, Mt. Holyoke, Smith & UMass Amherst)
Great Lakes Colleges Association, Digital Liberal Arts
Hamilton College, Digital Humanities Initiative (DHi)
Haverford College, Tri-Co Digital Humanities Initiative
Hendrix College, Eduhacker
Hope College, Mellon Scholars
Lewis & Clark College, Watzek Digital Initiatives
Occidental College, Center for Digital Learning and Research
Richard Stockton College, South Jersey Center for Digital Humanities
University of Richmond, Digital Scholarship Lab
Washington and Lee University, Digital Humanities at Washington and Lee
Wesleyan University, Digital Humanities Resource Guide
Wheaton College, Digital Humanities (page is out of date; Wheaton has a faculty working group)
Whittier College, Digital Liberal Arts Center
Related Centers
- supports digital classics, including the Homer Multitext Project which features collaborative undergraduate research on Byzantine Manuscripts of Homer.
Has this study/list been updated since 2008 anywhere?
No, I haven’t updated my list, but see these other resources:
Sula, Chris, S.E. Hackney, and Philip Cunningham. “A Survey of Digital Humanities Programs.” Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy issue 11. May 24, 2017. https://jitp.commons.gc.cuny.edu/a-survey-of-digital-humanities-programs/#Appendix_A
and
“Advanced Degrees in Digital Humanities.” GitHub list . Accessed Dec 15, 2019. https://github.com/dh-notes/dhnotes/blob/master/pages/dh-programs.md
(thanks to Katherine D. Harris who shared these with me)