collaborative blog of the Blake Archive and the Blake Quarterly. provides some great examples of how digital humanities tools can be used in English literature and history. Blog posts usually follow a thought process going step-by-step, which is helpful for someone who is learning these technologies. Contributors to the blog include scholars and researchers from The University of North Carolina Chapel Hill and the University of Rochester.
The Theoi Project, a site exploring Greek mythology and the gods in classical literature and art. The aim of the project is to provide a comprehensive, free reference guide to the gods (theoi), spirits (daimones), fabulous creatures (theres) and heroes of ancient Greek mythology and religion.
Data Together is a new model for distributed, community-driven stewardship of data. This model shows how groups of people, companies, institutions, NGOs, and governments can use decentralized and peer-to-peer web infrastructure to access, discover, verify, and preserve data they care about. We hope to build a future in which networks of collaborators make their data accessible to their peers, immediately discoverable, easily verifiable, and robustly preserved. This site is not a centralized data hosting service. It’s a view onto the decentralized network of individuals, organizations, projects and communities who are using the Data Together model. Data Together is an ongoing, inclusive conversation, an open source community, a collaboration, a model, and a collection of tools, all of which are evolving quickly.
Radical Philosophy, a UK-based journal of socialist and feminist philosophy, Founded in 1972, includesessays and interviews with nearly all of the big names in academic philosophy on the left -- from Marxists, to post-structuralists, to post-colonialists, to phenomenologists, to critical theorists, to Lacanians, to queer theorists, to radical theologians, to the pragmatist Richard Rorty. The full range of radical critical theory over the past 45 years appears here, as well as contrarian responses from philosophers on the left. Michel Foucault, Alain Badiou, Judith Butler & More (1972-2018).