Digital Humanities remains a contested, umbrella term covering many
types of work in numerous disciplines, including literature,
history, linguistics, classics, theater, performance studies, film,
media studies, computer science, and information science. In
Traces of the Old, Uses of the New: The Emergence of Digital
Literary Studies, Amy Earhart stakes a claim for
discipline-specific history of digital study as a necessary prelude
to true progress in defining Digital Humanities as a shared set of
interdisciplinary practices and interests.
Traces of the Old, Uses of the New focuses on twenty-five
years of developments, including digital editions, digital
archives, e-texts, text mining, and visualization, to situate
emergent products and processes in relation to historical trends of
disciplinary interest in literary study. By reexamining the roil of
theoretical debates and applied practices from the last generation
of work in juxtaposition with applied digital work of the same
period, Earhart also seeks to expose limitations in need of
alternative methods -- methods that might begin to deliver on the
early (but thus far unfulfilled) promise that digitizing texts
allows literature scholars to ask and answer questions in new and
compelling ways. In mapping the history of digital literary
scholarship, Earhart also seeks to chart viable paths to its
future, and in doing this work in one discipline, this book aims to
inspire similar work in others.