DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly

Author Biographies

Smiljana Antonijevic
Sophie Bocksberger
Eleni Bozia Dr. Eleni Bozia is an Assistant Professor of Classics and Digital Humanities in the Department of Classics and the Digital Worlds Institute at the University of Florida. She holds two doctoral degrees: a Ph.D. in Classical Studies (University of Florida) and a Dr. Phil. in Digital Humanities (Universität Leipzig). Her research areas include Imperial Greek and Latin literature, ethnicity and national identity issues, and digital humanities. She also serves as the Associate Director of the Center for Greek Studies and the Associate Director of the Digital Epigraphy and Archaeology Project and holds a visiting research appointment at the Universität Leipzig in Germany.

Bozia is the author of the book "Lucian and his Roman Voices: Cultural Exchanges and Conflicts in the Late Roman Empire." Bozia is the recipient of collaborative grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Le ministère de l’Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche, the Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenchaften, and several national and international awards including the Assistant Professor Excellence Award, the Young Researcher Fellowship from La Fondation Hardt, the E-Humanities Award from the Universität Leipzig, the Mary A. Sollman Scholarship of the American Academy in Rome, and the CIEGL Bursary from the University of Oxford.

Philip I. Buckland
Adam Chapman
Nicolò Dell'Unto
Anna Foka Anna Foka is Associate Professor of Information Technology and Scientific Leader and Manager of DH Uppsala, at Uppsala University. She has a background Classics, Ancient History and Archaeology (MA 2006, PhD 2009, University of Liverpool) as well as Media and Performance Studies (NCU Athens, Greece). Anna Foka’s research interests lie in the intersection of digital technology with historical disciplines. She has published on classics,  ancient history and archaeology, gender and humour, classical reception, game studies, augmented and virtual reality  for museums, digital visualizations and geography.
Joshua L. Mann Joshua Mann is President and CEO of Expositus, a research and education 501(c)(3) nonprofit working in the area of digital humanities. Previously he was a Research Fellow at CODEC Research Centre for Digital Theology at the University of Durham (UK). His research engages subjects in digital humanities and biblical studies. He is particularly interested in the hermeneutics of technology, i.e., how technology itself means and has politics.
Chris Mustazza Chris Mustazza is a doctoral student in English Literature at the University of Pennsylvania and the Associate Director of the PennSound archive, the world's largest archive of freely available recordings of poets reading their own work. Chris has edited several never-before-heard historical collections of poetry recordings, incuding readings by Gertrude Stein, James Weldon Johnson, and Robert Frost. His essay on the Vachel Lindsay recordings was awarded Penn's Sweeten Prize for best essay in American Literature and was subsequently published in the Chicago Review. He was awarded a creative grant by Harvard's Woodberry Poetry Room to work on his dissertation, tentatively titled "The Birth of the American Poetry Audio Archive".
Gísli Pálsson
Claudia Sciuto Claudia Sciuto is a PhD candidate at the MAL – Environmental Archaeology Laboratory at Umeå University (Sweden). She is an archaeologist with an interest in archaeological science and the study of stones and sediments as sources for understanding ancient environments and human's adaptation.
Helen Slaney
Ellysa Stern Cahoy
Jonathan Westin