Sally Ball
Latest post: Materiality: Rectangles, Accordions
Sally Ball is an assistant professor in the Department of English at Arizona State University and the acting director of the department’s Creative Writing program. She is the associate director of Four Way Books, a nonprofit literary press located in New York City. She is the author of two collections of poems: Annus Mirabilis (2005) and Wreck Me (2013).
More by SallyDavid Berry
Latest post: The Minigraph: The Future of the Monograph?
David M. Berry is Reader in the School of Media, Film and Music at the University of Sussex. His research interests include media/medium theory, software studies, digital humanities, and technology. He is particularly interested in the methodological and theoretical challenges of digital media and has strong research interests in the philosophy of software and critical theory. His latest book is Critical Theory and the Digital (Bloomsbury 2014), and he blogs at http://stunlaw.blogspot.com/
More by DavidAmaranth Borsuk
Latest post: The Body of the Text: When Materiality is No Longer Marginal
Amaranth Borsuk is an assistant professor in Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences at the University of Washington, Bothell, where she also teaches in the MFA in Creative Writing and Poetics program. She is the author of Between Page and Screen (2012) a hybrid digital/print book of poems. In addition to writing and studying poetry, Amaranth is a letterpress printer and book artist whose fascination with printed matter informs her work on digital media.
More by AmaranthTorie Bosch
Latest post: The High Road: Writing About Hate Mail
Torie Bosch is the editor of Future Tense, a project of Slate, the New America Foundation and Arizona State University that looks at the implications of emerging technologies. She was previously an associate editor at Slate for the medical and religion departments.
More by TorieAlice Daer
Latest post: Because Community
Alice Daer is an assistant professor of rhetoric and composition studies in the Department of English at Arizona State University, where she specializes in digital literacies and social media. Alice is also a Faculty Fellow at ASU’s Center for Games and Impact.
More by AliceJoey Eschrich
Latest post: Do Authors Need Tenure?
Joey is Editor and Program Manager at Arizona State University’s Center for Science and the Imagination. He also coordinates Future Tense, ASU’s collaboration with Slate magazine and the New America Foundation on emerging technologies, policy and society. Joey earned both his master’s degree in Gender Studies and his bachelor’s degree in Film and Media Studies from Arizona State University.
More by JoeyEd Finn
Latest post: The Algorithmic Corpse
Ed Finn is the founding director of the Center for Science and the Imagination at Arizona State University, where he is an assistant professor with a joint appointment in the School of Arts, Media and Engineering and the Department of English. Ed’s research and teaching explore digital narratives, contemporary culture and the intersection of the humanities, arts and sciences. He completed his PhD in English and American literature at Stanford University in 2011.
More by EdAlexander Halavais
Latest post: The Calibans at Night
Alexander Halavais is an associate professor in the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences at Arizona State University, where he researches how social media change the nature of scholarship and learning, and allow for new forms of collaboration and self-government. Before joining ASU, Alex taught in the Interactive Communications program at Quinnipiac University and directed the master’s degree program in Informatics at the University at Buffalo. He is the president of the Association of Internet Researchers.
More by AlexanderMatthew Harp
Latest post: Matthew Harp: Elusive Archives
Matthew Harp is Multimedia Producer of informational videos and audio podcasts, curator of audio/visual collections and a project manager on content management system implementations for the ASU Libraries. He was named one of Library Journal’s Movers and Shakers in 2010 for his productions. He received his Library Master’s in Information resources and Library Science and Certificate in Digital Information Management from the University of Arizona.
More by MatthewMicah Lande
Latest post: Ada's Morning
Micah Lande is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Engineering in the College of Technology and Innovation at Arizona State University. Micah teaches human-centered design innovation and researches how engineers and makers learn and apply a design process to their work. He has been an Editor-in-Chief of Ambidextrous Journal of Design, producing issues that captured stories of the people and processes of design.
More by MicahAnouk Lang
Latest post: Digital Textual Communities as Deep Maps: A Case Study
Anouk Lang is a lecturer in Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Strathclyde; in September 2014 she will be joining the Department of English Literature at the University of Edinburgh as a lecturer in digital humanities. Her research focuses on the development of literary modernism in the English-speaking world beyond the British Isles and the United States. She is the editor of the book From Codex to Hypertext: Reading at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century (2012).
More by AnoukC. Max Magee
Latest post: In the Future, We’ll All Have Pet Bots
C. Max Magee is the founder and editor of The Millions, an online literary magazine offering coverage on books, arts and culture since 2003. He is the co-editor of the book The Late American Novel: Writers on the Future of Books (2011).
More by C. MaxErin McCarthy
Latest post: Ada in the Rare Books Library
Erin A. McCarthy is the assistant director of the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, a statewide research unit that coordinates programs at Arizona State University, the University of Arizona and Northern Arizona University. Her research interests include early modern English poetry and poetics, Shakespeare, bibliography and the history of the book, and scholarly editing. She is currently working on a book that examines the printing of late sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English verse collections and argues that print publication fundamentally altered early modern English poetic culture.
More by Erin A.Richard Nash
Latest post: INTERVIEW: Richard Nash
Richard Nash is an independent publishing entrepreneur: Vice President of Partnerships at Byliner, former VP of Community and Content for Small Demons, founder of Cursor, and publisher of Red Lemonade. For most of the past decade, he ran the iconic indie Soft Skull Press; for his work he was awarded the Association of American Publishers’ Miriam Bass Award for Creativity in Independent Publishing in 2005. Richard is also an accomplished editor; the last book he edited, Lydia Millet’s Love in Infant Monkeys, was selected as a 2010 Pulitzer Prize finalist.
More by RichardCorey Pressman
Latest post: Corey Pressman: The Post-Book Textbook
Corey taught anthropology for 12 years before founding Exprima Media, a software design and development company that partners with clients to envision, design, and develop compelling and effective interactive experiences. Corey publishes and delivers presentations on a variety of topics including the future of storytelling, interaction design, and global mobile initiatives.
More by Coreyselisker
Latest post: Digital Textual Community Case Study: The LARB
Scott Selisker is a visiting assistant professor in the Department of English at the University of Arizona. He works on twentieth-century and contemporary U.S. literature and culture, with emphases on science and technology and the digital humanities. His writing has appeared or is forthcoming in American Literature, Novel: A Forum on Fiction, African American Review, The Los Angeles Review of Books, and Stanford Arcade.
More by Scottmichael simeone
Latest post: The Future of Creativity and the Book in the Face of Probable Doom, Part 3: In the Wake of the Google Book
Michael Simeone is the Director of the IHR Nexus Lab for Digital Humanities and Transdisciplinary Informatics at Arizona State University. His research interests include computing and humanities, visualization, and storytelling about nonlinear systems. He actually does hold out hope for the future.
More by michaelBob Stein
Latest post: Email: A Case Study Leads to Unexpected Conclusions
Bob Stein is the founder and co-director of the Institute for the Future of the Book and founder of The Voyager Company. For thirteen years he led the development of over 300 titles in The Criterion Collection, a series of definitive films on home video. Before Voyager, Stein worked at the Research Group at Atari on a variety of electronic publishing projects.
More by BobChristine Szuter
Latest post: Editing with Christine Szuter
Christine Szuter is a professor of practice in the School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies and the director of the Scholarly Publishing graduate program at Arizona State University. An anthropologist by training, Christine spent most of her career as an archaeologist and the director of the University of Arizona Press. The Scholarly Publishing program is embedded in ASU’s Public History program, so she has recently become particularly interested in the digital humanities.
More by ChristineMark Tebeau
Latest post: New Modes of Knowledge Production and the Book
Mark Tebeau is an associate professor in the School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies and the director of the Public History program at Arizona State University. Before joining ASU, Mark founded and co-directed the Center for Public History and Digital Humanities at Cleveland State University. There he led the development of Curatescape, a framework for mobile publishing that seeks to make open-source, low-cost mobile tools available to scholars and curators. Curatescape has built an rss feed that enables it to produce e-books and print books on demand. Now the question is, to what end and in what form?
More by MarkDennis Tenen
Latest post: Skeptics Online
Dennis Tenen is an assistant professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. Dennis is a former software engineer at Microsoft and is currently a faculty associate at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University. He is the founder of piracyLab, an academic research collective exploring the impact of piracy on the spread of knowledge around the world.
More by DennisErin Walker
Latest post: Books as Platforms for Surveillance
Erin Walker is an assistant professor in the School of Computing, Informatics, and Decision Systems Engineering at Arizona State University. Erin’s research uses interdisciplinary methods to improve the design and implementation of educational technology, and gain a better understanding of why it is effective. Her particular focus is furthering adaptive technology to support collaboration in a variety of different learning contexts.
More by ErinEric Wertheimer
Latest post:
Eric Wertheimer is a professor in the Division of Humanities, Arts and Culture, the associate vice provost for graduate programs, and the co-founder and past director of the Center for Critical Inquiry and Cultural Studies at Arizona State University. Eric’s diverse professional output includes writing cultural history, poetry and exploring the administrative and intellectual possibilities of the digital humanities. He serves on the editorial board of the journal Early American Literature, and his most recent book is Underwriting: The Poetics of Insurance in Early America (2006).
More by EricRuth Wylie
Latest post: Features of the Future Digital Textbook
Ruth Wylie is a postdoctoral scholar in the Learning Sciences Institute at Arizona State University. Her research focuses on the design and evaluation of educational technologies that facilitate student learning, help teachers in the classroom and provide insight into how students learn. She earned her PhD from the Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.
More by RuthG. Pascal Zachary
Latest post: Living in an Amazon world
G. Pascal Zachary is a professor of practice at Arizona State University with a join appointment in the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication and the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes. From 1989 to 2002, he was a senior writer for The Wall Street Journal, covering Silicon Valley and globalization, and from 2007 to 2008 he wrote the “Ping” column on innovation for The New York Times. His books include Hotel Africa: The Politics of Escape (2012), The Diversity Advantage: Multicultural Identity in the New World Economy (2003) and Endless Frontier: Vannevar Bush, Engineer of the American Century (1997).
More by G. Pascal