My work explores the impact of new technologies on
knowledge production, representation, and publication.

ABOUT ME

I am a Professor of English at the University of Guelph and Visiting Professor in English and Humanities Computing at the University of Alberta.

 

I explore the impact of new technologies on knowledge production, representation, and publication. My research involves collaborating to produce experimental online resources; making prototypes, interfaces, tools, and infrastructure to support socialized scholarship; investigating the potential of linked data and the semantic web to support inquiry into difference, diversity, and the nuances of culture; and examining the effects of rapid social and technological changes on writing in the Victorian period.

 

My research in digital humanities, Victorian literature, and women’s writing informs Orlando: Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present (www.ualberta.ca/orlando), an ongoing experiment in digital literary history, published online by Cambridge University Press since 2006, that I direct and co-edit.

 

I lead the development of the Canadian Writing Research Collaboratory (www.cwrc.ca), a CFI-funded online repository and research environment for literary studies in Canada. CWRC is developing tools for collaborative knowledge production, interoperability, and sustainability of digital scholarly resources.

 

I am the President (English) of the Canadian Society for Digital Humanities/ Societé Canadienne des humanités numérique.

 

My current research focuses on using digital
technologies for literary history, and spans
aspects of text encoding, text mining,
visualization, interface design and usability,
and the impacts of technological innovation
 on Victorian literature.

CURRICULUM VITAE

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412 MacKinnon, University of Guelph
50 Stone Road East, Guelph, Ontario
N1G 2W1 Canada
519-824-4120 x 53266

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