I’m very pleased to be visiting Santa Clara University this week, where I’ll give a talk today on “Roberto Busa, SJ, and The First Humanities Computing Center.” I’ve already met some really interesting local faculty and administrators (starting with Amy Lueck). And I got to ride in an autonomous vehicle.
Category: Digital Humanities
DAH conference, Dublin: “Digital Entanglements”
On November 18, I’ll be giving a keynote presentation at what promises to be a very interesting conference at Trinity College Dublin, “Digital Entanglements: the Post-Digital Present,” sponsored by the Digital Arts and Humanities PhD program. I’ll be working my own variation on the idea of the post-digital present, “The Digital Humanities After the Eversion.”
Chicago conference: postwar DH and its legacies
I’m excited to be back in Chicago for a day conference at Loyola’s CTSDH, with colleagues Paul Eggert and Kyle Roberts and others, on postwar digital humanities and its legacies. And in such excellent company: Geoffrey Rockwell, Laura Mandell, and Ted Underwood.
Here at USF
And looking forward to the start of the fall semester.
New book now available
The new book, Roberto Busa, S.J., and The Emergence of Humanities Computing: The Priest and the Punched Cards (Routledge, 2016), is now available, as is a website to accompany the book, which contains captioned archival photos and other images, and links to the publisher’s page, the Amazon page, and a free copy of the introduction to the book.
New position, University of South Florida
I’m very pleased to announce that, starting in August 2016, I’ll be taking a new position as the DeBartolo Professor of Digital Humanities at the University of South Florida. The opportunities for research and collaboration are very exciting–both in the English department and across the university. I’m grateful to my friends, colleagues, and students at Loyola University Chicago, whom I’ll miss, but I’m really looking forward to starting the fall semester at USF.
Advance endorsements
I’m grateful and honored to have received the following advance endorsements of Roberto Busa, S.J., and The Emergence of Humanities Computing: The Priest and the Punched Cards, which will be published in April 2016.
“In The Priest and the Punched Cards, Steven Jones explodes the most oft-repeated origin story of the Digital Humanities and then puts it back together again piece by archival piece, replacing mythology and commonplace with scrupulous research, forensic reconstruction, and deep media archaeology. It is a work of scholarship that is as lively and atmospheric (and compelling) as a novel.”
— Matthew Kirschenbaum, author of Track Changes: A Literary History of Word Processing
“An essential investigation, covering both technological advancement, and the lived experience of Father Busa as he undertook his groundbreaking, and field forming, research. This text is vital reading for those interested in the history of computing, and the use of computing in history.”
— Melissa M. Terras, University College London, Director of UCL Centre for Digital Humanities
“This fascinating book succeeds in both problematizing and pushing forward our hitherto limited understandings of the complex and shifting relationships that developed between Busa and IBM, on one side, and the emerging field of Digital Humanities, on the other. It is a tremendous and important contribution to scholarship on the History of (Digital) Humanities.”
— Julianne Nyhan, University College London
“The Priest and the Punched Cards maps the improbable story of the emergence of digital humanities in the 1940s out of an Italian Jesuit’s vision of an electronic concordance of the works of St. Thomas Aquinas. In this dazzling exposition Steven E. Jones traces the historical factors that converged as Father Roberto Busa, SJ pursued a scholarly passion—the vision of an electronic concordance of the works of St. Thomas Aquinas—that pulled him from war ravaged Italy to the New York office of IBM President Thomas J. Watson, to a state of nervous exhaustion from overwork, and finally to a completed concordance that continues to serve scholars today. As in the best of media archaeology, along the way Jones uncovers radio tubes, key punch cards, and scores of unsung women keypunch operators; the dream of the computerized analysis of the Dead Sea Scrolls; and the mid-century popular imagery of the thinking machine in Katherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy in Desk Set, LIFE magazine and other popular culture artifacts. The Priest and the Punched Cards is a must-read—and a pleasure, at that—for scholars and students of cultural theory, humanities computing and digital humanities, intellectual history, and Jesuit contributions to contemporary culture.”
— Micki McGee, Fordham University
New Book forthcoming spring 2016
The new book I’ve been working on for the past year, Roberto Busa, S. J., and the Emergence of Humanities Computing: The Priest and the Punched Cards, is now at the press, and will be published by Routledge in spring 2016. It’s about the Italian Jesuit scholar who collaborated with IBM to produce a massive concordance to the works of St. Thomas Aquinas, among other projects, starting in 1949. This story has become the founding myth of humanities computing and, by extension, digital humanities. I aim to complicate the myth with history. I use Busa’s own papers, recently accessioned in Milan, as well as the IBM Archives and other sources, to write what I think of as the biography of his research project in its first decade, 1949-1959. Combining a media-archaeology and platform-studies approach with archival research, I explore the question of how the specific technologies of the punched-card data-processing era afforded and constrained the academic research agenda of humanities computing at the moment of its emergence.
Watch this space for more on the book and on a dedicated website in support of the book that will contain a collection of archival photographs and other contextual information.
Poster from Fordham talk (April 2015)
Fordham University, April 23, 2015
Thursday, April 23, 2015, 6:00 PM, I’ll be giving a talk on my book in progress, “The Priest and the Punched-Card Machines: Father Roberto Busa, SJ, and the Emergence of Humanities Computing,” at Fordham University (Father Busa’s home-base In New York for the early years of his work with IBM). Location: Duane 140 (Theology Conference Room), Fordham University, Rose Hill campus. The event is sponsored by the Interdisciplinary Faculty Seminar on Digital Technology and Scholarly Communications, the American Studies Program, and the Department of Theology.