About this Programme
Postgraduate Taught Programme: Digital Humanities and Culture
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Study Digital Humanities and Culture at Trinity
Introduction to the Digital Humanities and Culture programme at Trinity College Dublin
Why Digital Humanities and Culture?
Digital Humanities is a field of study, research, and invention at the intersection of humanities, computing, and information management. It is methodological by nature and multidisciplinary in scope involving the investigation, analysis, synthesis, and presentation of information in electronic form. The ever-evolving developments in computing and their performative and analytical capacity have created an environment for a quantum leap in humanities research and practice. This M.Phil. in Digital Humanities and Culture provides the opportunity for students to engage in this new and dynamic area of research via the technologies, methodologies, and theories for digitally-mediated humanities.
Digital humanists do not only create digital artefacts, but study how these media affect and are transforming the disciplines in which they are used. The computational tools and methods used in Digital Humanities cut across disciplinary practice to provide shared focal points, such as the preservation and curation of digital data, the aesthetics of the digital (from individual objects to entire worlds), as well as the creation of the born-digital. The application of technology to humanistic enquiry also fosters a privileged (and much needed) perspective on how the experience of being human is marked by the technologies of the digital age, and how these technologies can themselves be rendered more humane.
Who is this programme for?
The M.Phil. in Digital Humanities and Culture at Trinity attracts students from a wide variety of backgrounds. Many have taken a Bachelors, Masters or even a PhD in a humanities discipline, knowledge they want to enhance with a additional methodological layer. Others are practitioners in the cultural heritage sector or creative industries, who would like to sharpen their approach to technology through the application of techniques and models from the digital humanities in their work.
The degree also attracts researchers with a background in computer science or software engineering, for whom the course can satisfy a desire to deepen their understanding of the users and use contexts of the software they create under the challenging conditions presented by cultural data and contexts. This variety of perspectives within the student body makes for rich interactions and conversations.
Digital Humanities Research at Trinity College Dublin
The students on the Masters in Digital Humanities and Culture will be encouraged to participate in the activities, projects and network of the Trinity Centre for Digital Humanities Centre. Trinity is internationally recognised for its research in this field, and maintains a lively team of DH researchers, projects, partners and visitors.
The Centre acts as a conduit between humanities research and researchers ay TCD and the nationally recognised Science Foundation Ireland ADAPT Centre for personalised and localised technology development and the DARIAH ERIC European Research Infrastructure for Arts and Humanities, as well as a wide network of international research partners.