Doing Black Digital Humanities with Radical Intentionality 1st Edition
Doing Black Digital Humanities with Radical Intentionality, 1st Edition by Catherine Knight Steele, Jessica H. Lu, and Kevin C. Winstead is a vital, practice-driven guide for scholars, students, librarians, and cultural workers who want to center Black life and liberation in digital scholarship. This powerful volume reframes digital humanities through an explicitly Black, intersectional lens—offering strategies that are at once methodologically rigorous and ethically grounded.
Discover how essays and case studies translate theory into action: building community-focused digital archives, designing anti-colonial metadata, developing participatory pedagogy, and sustaining projects that honor Black epistemologies. Contributors map hands-on workflows, ethical decision-making, and technological choices that make digital projects accessible, accountable, and socially transformative.
Perfect for use in campus courses, research labs, cultural heritage institutions, and activist collectives across the United States and globally, this book supplies practical frameworks and critical reflection for anyone committed to equitable digital practice. Readers will walk away with concrete tools for project planning, community collaboration, and long-term stewardship—plus inspiration to challenge extractive infrastructures and center care in digital work.
Whether you’re a professor shaping curriculum, a librarian reimagining collections, or an organizer building digital memory with community partners, Doing Black Digital Humanities with Radical Intentionality is an essential resource that connects scholarship to social justice. Add this 1st edition to your library to elevate ethical digital practice that honors Black knowledge, presence, and power—transforming how we make and share digital histories. Purchase now to begin reshaping digital humanities with purpose and integrity.
Note: eBooks do not include supplementary materials such as CDs, access codes, etc.


