Proceedings of the Digital Humanities Congress 2024
Edited by Lorraine Zhou
2025
Cite the Book
Zhou, Lorraine (Ed.). Proceedings of the Digital Humanities Congress 2024. Sheffield: The Digital Humanities Institute, 2025. Available online at: <https://www.dhi.ac.uk/books/dhc2024>
Table of Contents
Gyuri Kang and John A. Walsh. “The effect of a thing”: Nature and the Environment in Percy Bysshe Shelley and Algernon Charles Swinburne
Abdulrahman A. A. Alsayed. Analysing Egocentric Captures in VR-Mediated Embodiment Corpora: A Sensory Schematization Approach
Simon Mahony. Building Bridges and the Ties that Bind: Bringing Us Together but Respecting Our Differences
Leon Fruth, Nils Geißler, Tobias Gradl, and Daniela Schulz. Cataloguing Editions and Other Resources in One Unified System: The Case of the Text+ Registry
Frederik Truyen, Roberta Pireddu, Sofie Taes and Orfeas Menis. Contentious Descriptions and Bias in Published Photographic Heritage Collections: a Digital Humanities Approach
Manoj Singh Rana and Arnapurna Rath. Data (Co)Creation: Ethics and Challenges of Computational Tools in Narrative Analysis
Kyung Hee Yi. Digital Lookbook for an Ancient Kingdom, Koguryo
Toby Burrows, Giles Bergel, Fred Schurink and Guyda Armstrong. Heterogeneous Bibliographic Metadata and the Transnational Circulation of Books in Early Modern Europe
Andrea Kocsis. More Than a Feeling? Challenges of Computational Emotion Detection in Visitor Reviews of Heritage Sites
James Cummings and Diane Jakacki. Preserving Abbreviations and Tagging: Retaining Intellectual Content in HTR to TEI Workflows in the Evolving Hands project
About the Publication
The Digital Humanities Congress was held in Sheffield from 4-5th September 2024. The conference was intended to promote the sharing of knowledge, ideas and techniques within the digital humanities and we had a varied programme comprising 47 international speakers from disciplines across the arts, humanities and heritage domains. This digital edition of the conference proceedings presents a selection of the papers.
The keynote speakers were: Professor Melissa Terras (Professor of Digital Cultural Heritage at the University of Edinburgh); Professor Simon Mahony (Professor Emeritus of Digital Humanities at UCL); Paola Marchionni (Head of Engagement, Content & Discovery at Jisc) and Peter Findlay (Subject Matter Expert – Digital Scholarship, Content & Discovery at Jisc).
Copyright and Permissions
This publication is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY). Please refer to this page for information about the copyright and permissions relating to this work.