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  2022 (5)
Investing in Project Maintenance: Auditing the Digital Transgender Archive. Schlotterback, E.; Roles, C. F.; and Rawson, K. J. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 016(1). February 2022.
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Stitching the Fragmented: Feminist Maker Pedagogy and Immersive Technologies for Cultural Learning. Péron, M.; Moody, M.; and Karasic, V. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 0016(2). May 2022.
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Data Stories for/from All: Why Data Feminism is for Everyone. Rezai, Y. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 016(2). June 2022.
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Networked Cross-Dressing: A Digital Refashioning of Shakespearean Gender Subversion. Simpson, E.; Brown, H. L. P.; Sabb, L.; Shortell, O.; and Lee, J. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 016(3). July 2022.
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Studying Large-Scale Behavioral Differences in Auschwitz-Birkenau with Simulation of Gendered Narratives. Tóth, G. M.; Hempel, T.; Somandepalli, K.; and Narayanan, S. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 016(3). June 2022.
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  2021 (6)
Africa and the Avatar Dream. Mapping the Impacts of Videogame Representations of Africa. Harrell, D. F.; Sengün, S.; and Olson, D. In Risam, R.; and Josephs, K. B., editor(s), The digital Black Atlantic, of Debates in the digital humanities. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 2021.
Africa and the Avatar Dream. Mapping the Impacts of Videogame Representations of Africa [link]Paper   link   bibtex  
Inferring standard name form, gender and nobility from historical texts using stable model semantics. Lauc, D.; and Vitek, D. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 015(1). May 2021.
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Books Aren't Dead: Resurrecting Audio Technology and Feminist Digital Humanities Approaches to Publication and Authorship. Edwards, E.; and Hershkowitz, R. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 015(1). March 2021.
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Modernism and Gender at the Limits of Stylometry. Weidman, S.; and Pastor, A. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 015(4). November 2021.
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Misogynoir Transformed: Black Women's Digital Resistance. Bailey, M. New York University Press, 2021.
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Gendered Configurations of Humans and Machines. Büssers, J.; Faulhaber, A.; Raboldt, M.; and Wiesner, R. Verlag Barbara Budrich, 2021.
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  2020 (3)
Ooligan Press: Building and Sustaining a Feminist Digital Humanities Lab at a R-2. Berens, K. I.; Gaterud, A.; and Noorda, R. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 014(3). September 2020.
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Glitch Feminism. A Manifesto. Russell, L. Verso Books, 2020.
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Data Feminism. D'Ignazio, C.; and Klein, L. F. The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2020.
Data Feminism [link]Paper   link   bibtex   abstract   1 download  
  2019 (3)
Gender, Technik und Politik 4.0 - Über digitalen Kapitalismus, disruptive Technologien und neue Regime der Unsicherheit. Lengersdorf, D.; and Weber, J. , 11. 2019.
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Against Cleaning (Chapter 23). Rawson, K.; and Muñoz, T. In Gold, M. K.; and Klein, L. F., editor(s), Debates in the Digital Humanities 2019. University of Minnesota Press, April 2019.
Against Cleaning (Chapter 23) [link]Paper   doi   link   bibtex  
Digital Entrepreneurship, Gender and Intersectionality. An East Asian Perspective. Leung, W. Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.
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  2018 (3)
Gender Shades: Intersectional Accuracy Disparities in Commercial Gender Classification. Buolamwini, J.; and Gebru, T. Proceedings of Machine Learning Research. Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency, 81. 2018.
Gender Shades: Intersectional Accuracy Disparities in Commercial Gender Classification [pdf]Paper   link   bibtex  
Bodies of Information: Intersectional Feminism and the Digital Humanities. Losh, E.; and Wernimont, J. of Debates in the Digital HumanitiesUniversity of Minnesota Press, 2018.
Bodies of Information: Intersectional Feminism and the Digital Humanities [link]Paper   link   bibtex  
Programmed Inequality. How Britain Discarded Women Technologists and Lost Its Edge in Computing. Hicks, M. MITPress, 2018.
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  2017 (3)
Playing with Identities: Queering Digital Narratology and the Exploration of Gender and Sexual Identities. Fung, C. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 011(3). September 2017.
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An Ontology for Gendered Content Representation of Cultural Heritage Artefacts. Kyvernitou, I.; and Bikakis, A. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 011(3). August 2017.
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(Not) Getting Paid to Do What You Love: Gender, Social Media, and Aspirational Work. Duffy, B. E. Yale University Press, 2017.
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  2016 (4)
As Luck Would Have ItSerendipity and Solace in Digital Research Infrastructure. Verhoeven, D. Feminist Media Histories, 2(1): 7–28. January 2016. Publisher: University of California Press
As Luck Would Have ItSerendipity and Solace in Digital Research Infrastructure [link]Paper   doi   link   bibtex   abstract  
The Intersectional Internet; Race, Sex, Class, and Culture Online. Noble, S. U.; and Tynes, B. M. Peter Lang US, 2016.
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The Digital Housewife. Feminism, Labour and Digital Media. Jarrett, K. Routledge, 2016.
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A Future for Intersectional Black Feminist Technology Studies. Noble, S. U. Scholar & Feminist Online, 13.3 - 14.1. 2016.
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  2015 (5)
Man and His Tool, Again? Queer and Feminist Notes on Practices in the Digital Humanities and Object Orientations Everywhere. Bianco, J. ". Digital Humanities Quarterly, 009(2). September 2015.
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What can the digital humanities learn from feminist game studies?. Losh, E. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 009(2). September 2015.
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An Information Science Question in DH Feminism. Clement, T. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 009(2). September 2015.
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The Shock of the Familiar: Three Timelines about Gender and Technology in the Library. Dean, G. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 009(2). September 2015.
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Introduction to Feminisms and DH special issue. Wernimont, J. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 009(02). August 2015.
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  2013 (2)
Whence Feminism? Assessing Feminist Interventions in Digital Literary Archives. Wernimont, J. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 007(1). July 2013.
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Gender in Science and Technology. Ernst, W.; and Horwath, I. transcript, 2013.
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  2011 (1)
The Postcolonial Science and Technology Studies Reader. Harding, S. Duke University Press, 2011.
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  2009 (1)
Vive la Différence! Text Mining Gender Difference in French Literature. Argamon, S.; Goulain, J.; Horton, R.; and Olsen, M. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 003(2). June 2009.
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  2005 (1)
Geschlechterstudien/Gender Studies: Transdisziplinäre Kompetenz als Schlüsselqualifikation in Wissensgesellschaften. Baer, S. In Kahlert, H.; Thiessen, B.; and Weller, I., editor(s), Quer denken — Strukturen verändern, pages 143–162. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, Wiesbaden, 2005.
Geschlechterstudien/Gender Studies: Transdisziplinäre Kompetenz als Schlüsselqualifikation in Wissensgesellschaften [link]Paper   doi   link   bibtex  
  undefined (1)
Abigail Moreshead: "Gender and Para-Academic Labor: The Invisible Translators of Old English and their Legacy in Digital Humanities" • Issue 18.2 • Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies.
Abigail Moreshead: "Gender and Para-Academic Labor: The Invisible Translators of Old English and their Legacy in Digital Humanities" • Issue 18.2 • Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies [link]Paper   link   bibtex