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User:JosebaAbaitua/sandbox/References/DHum1920/MARROQUÍN GÓMEZ, Alaitz

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Readings

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  1. Template:Wikipedia referencing
  2. Wikipedia:Citing sources
  3. Help:Introduction to referencing with Wiki Markup

Examples

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  1. Journal: As reported by Jänicke, Franzini, Cheema & Scheuermann (2017), "This shift from reading a single book “on paper” to the possibility of browsing many digital texts is one of the origins and principal pillars of the digital humanities domain, which helps to develop solutions to handle vast amounts of cultural heritage data – text being the main data type".[1]
  1. Web: In the words of Wyatt & Byrne (September 25, 2019), "The Wikidata team published four strategy papers, including the high-level vision, and a specific paper discussing the future of the Wikibase ecosystem. This latter report provides the specific motivation for why the cultural sector – particularly national libraries – are investigating Wikibase". [2]
  1. Book: In this book, levenberg, Neilson & Rheams (2018), consider digital humanities to include both the use of computing to understand cultural material in new ways, and the application of theories and methods from the humanities to interpret new technologies. [3]
  1. Book Chapter: According to Jones (2013), "The cultural response to changes in technology, the eversion, provides an essential context for understanding the emergence of DH as a new field of study in the new millennium."[4]

Jones, S. E. (2013). “Chapter 1: Eversion” In S.E. Jones (Ed.), The emergence of the digital humanities (pp. 18-39). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis, Routledge.

  1. ^ Jänicke, Stefan; Franzini, Greta; Cheema, Muhammad Faisal; Scheuermann, Gerik (2017). "Visual text analysis in #DigitalHumanities" (PDF). Computer Graphics Forum. 36 (6): 226–250.
  2. ^ Wyatt, Liam; Byrne, Wendy. "Wikidata & Wikibase for National Libraries: the inaugural meeting". Pro europeana. Retrieved 4 May 2020.
  3. ^ levenberg, lewis; Neilson, Tai; Rheams, David (2018). Research Methods for the Digital Humanities. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature. p. 330. ISBN 978-3-319-96712-7.
  4. ^ Jones, Steven E. (2013). The emergence of the digital humanities. New York, NY: Taylor & Francis, Routledge. pp. 18–39.