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New job at Wellcome
The past few months have been quite busy leaving me with little time to update my website. So much has happened, and it’s been an incredible journey. First and foremost, I completed my Marie Curie fellowship at King’s College London, a truly great experience. I worked with wonderful people, learned a lot and produced a significant number of outputs that I’m proud of. I’m also thrilled to share that my book for Routledge has reached the production phase (more about it soon).
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Interviews published in Zenodo
As part of my Marie Curie research, I conducted a set of interviews with members of King’s Digital Lab, management staff and researchers involved in the lab work. Discussions revolved around the institutional, research, and socio-technical infrastructure of King’s College London and King’s Digital Lab, the social practices of digital projects, the use of digital tools in everyday research practices and the challenges of conducting research with regard to the lab management, organisation, policies, and facilities. The transcripts of the interviews are available in Zenodo here.
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Chinese translation
I’m happy to share that my article “Infrastructuring digital humanities: On relational infrastructure and global reconfiguration of the field” published in Digital Scholarship in the Humanities has been translated into Chinese and released in the Digital Humanities Research journal.
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My new paper in Convergence
My new open access article has been published in the Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies. Based on the ethnography of King’s Digital Lab, I analyse Feasibility documents and propose a theoretical and methodological approach towards the study of documents in digital research production. The full article is available here.
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My new piece in THE
I’m excited to share that my new piece, “Digital humanities needs equality between humanists and technicians”, has been published in Times Higher Education. It is about labour issues and recognition that are becoming increasingly salient in digital humanities labs. As I argue, introducing a fair publication policy, such as the one recently published by King’s, is a step towards assuring that the work performed by research technicians and technology and skills specialists is acknowledged in research outputs. Recognition of contribution is a prerequisite for research production. Check it out here.