Daniel Allington, Sarah Brouillete, and David Golumbia explain how Digital Humanities plays a lead role in the corporatist restructuring of the humanities.
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%0 Generic
%1 allington_neoliberal_2016
%A Allington, Daniel
%A Brouillette, Sarah
%A Golumbia, David
%D 2016
%J Los Angeles Review of Books
%K netzpolitik
%T Neoliberal tools (and archives) : a political history of digital humanities
%U https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/neoliberal-tools-archives-political-history-digital-humanities/
%X Daniel Allington, Sarah Brouillete, and David Golumbia explain how Digital Humanities plays a lead role in the corporatist restructuring of the humanities.
@misc{allington_neoliberal_2016,
abstract = {Daniel Allington, Sarah Brouillete, and David Golumbia explain how Digital Humanities plays a lead role in the corporatist restructuring of the humanities.},
added-at = {2018-11-04T17:07:27.000+0100},
author = {Allington, Daniel and Brouillette, Sarah and Golumbia, David},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2d70e3d84c07db4840edd51cd61250c7d/lepsky},
interhash = {87fe42680d5320eb5c248d134922f098},
intrahash = {d70e3d84c07db4840edd51cd61250c7d},
journal = {Los Angeles Review of Books},
keywords = {netzpolitik},
shorttitle = {Neoliberal {Tools} (and {Archives})},
timestamp = {2018-11-04T17:07:27.000+0100},
title = {Neoliberal tools (and archives) : a political history of digital humanities},
url = {https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/neoliberal-tools-archives-political-history-digital-humanities/},
urldate = {2016-05-03},
year = 2016
}