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Cripping Technology

This guide is intended as a companion for the Cripping Technology: Humanities Lab.

Intersections

Critical Digital Humanities

A number of important issues intersect in complicated and important ways in digital humanities work. Below, we briefly introduce some of these along with one recommended reading and resource each in an effort to promote an intersectional digital humanities.

Access + Accessibility
Accessibility focuses on making digital humanities projects available for those with various kinds of ability and access, including making websites usable with screen readers and low-bandwidth connections. 

"Disability, Universal Design, and the Digital Humanities"
George H. Williams

Cultural Protocols
Many communities share and access their intellectual property and cultural heritage through unique cultural protocols which demand more nuance than many copyright laws and digital platforms have typically provided.

Environmental Impact
The effects of digital technology, despite the ubiquity of terms such as "wireless" and "cloud," have real environmental impact, from the CO2 emissions generated from each Google search to the toxic layers of computer hardware contributing to the anthropocene.

Gender & Sexuality 
From the foundational, though often obscured, role played by women throughout the entire history of computing, to the expression of self amidst dominant binary forms, gender and sexuality have a deep and complicated relationship with digital technology.

Labor
Digital humanities projects can often involve significant forms of labor, from public and anonymous crowdsourcing to undergraduate and graduate student work, and the need to provide proper forms of compensation and acknowledgement is important.

Privacy
To exist online to is perform new kinds of publicity and self, what the Critical Art Ensemble first called our "data body." Considering privacy online is a necessity for digital humanities scholarship from the classroom to the archive and beyond. 

Race
As Moya Bailey has written, "The ways in which identities inform both theory and practice in digital humanities have been largely overlooked." From expression to erasure, race, technology, and the humanities have a long, difficult and important relationship, which needs acknowledging and more.

The ASU Library acknowledges the twenty-three Native Nations that have inhabited this land for centuries. Arizona State University's four campuses are located in the Salt River Valley on ancestral territories of Indigenous peoples, including the Akimel O’odham (Pima) and Pee Posh (Maricopa) Indian Communities, whose care and keeping of these lands allows us to be here today. ASU Library acknowledges the sovereignty of these nations and seeks to foster an environment of success and possibility for Native American students and patrons. We are advocates for the incorporation of Indigenous knowledge systems and research methodologies within contemporary library practice. ASU Library welcomes members of the Akimel O’odham and Pee Posh, and all Native nations to the Library.