While the digital dissertation is not new, the cultural and technical conditions shaping its creation, evaluation, and preservation are almost certainly obscure. The digital diss includes such wide-ranging cases as companion websites, interactive PDFs, databases, digital collections, and the use of digital tools to create analyses and visualizations---a.k.a "those that are not just traditional, word-based texts that are archived digitally." This roundtable assembles a group of early career scholars, many of whom have Rutgers ties, to discuss the hows and whys as well as provisos associated with this natively digital format.
Registrants will receive the zoom link for the event via email.
FN: Virginia Kuhn and Anke Finger, eds., Shaping the Digital Dissertation: Knowledge Production in the Arts and Humanities (Open Book Publishers, 2021), https://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0239, p. 2. ↩
0 upcoming sessions on Wednesday, December 31, 1969.