CV

EDUCATION

Ph.D., English, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, 1997.
M.A., English, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, 1993.
B.A., English, Montana State University, Bozeman, 1989.

ACADEMIC/RESEARCH POSITIONS

Assistant Professor, Department of English, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE (August 2012 – Present).
Lecturer, Department of English, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (September 2009 – August 2012).
Co-Director and Co-Founder, Stanford Literary Lab. http://www.litlab.stanford.edu (2010).
Consulting Assistant Professor, Department of English, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (September 2002 – June 2009).
Senior Research Advisor, Novel Projects. http://www.bookgenome.org/ (September 2009-Present)
Academic Technology Specialist Program Manager, Academic Computing, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (February 2003 – August 2012).
Academic Technology Specialist, Department of English, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (February 2001 – August 2012).
Executive Director (Co-Founder), Western Institute of Irish Studies (January 2004 – January 2009).
Research Scholar in the Digital Humanities, Stanford Humanities Center, Stanford, CA (September 2006 – August 2007).
Coordinator of Curriculum, Instruction, and Technology, University of Northern Colorado, Center for Human Enrichment, Greeley, CO (August 1997 –February 2001).
Assistant Editor, Colorado North Review, Greeley, Colorado (1993).

GRADUATE POSITIONS

Assistant to the Director of Irish Studies, Department of English, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (1995 – 1997).
Graduate Teaching Assistant, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (1993 – 1995).
Archives Intern, Morris Library, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (1994 – 1995).
Graduate Teaching Assistant, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley (1990 – 1993).

RESEARCH GRANTS

2012 Data Transfer Grant from Booklamp.org in support of the “Unfolding the Novel” research project. (A non-monetary grant that includes access to data extracted from 47,000 novels).
2010-2012 Software Environment for the Advancement of Scholarly Research (SEASR) project. Received with Collaborators. Funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation ($790,000).
2010 Startup Grant in support of Stanford Literary Laboratory. Received with Franco Moretti. Funded by Stanford Institute for Creativity and the Arts (SICA) ($5,000).
2010 Startup Grant in support of Stanford Literary Laboratory. Received with Franco Moretti. Funded by the Stanford Presidential Fund for Innovation in the Humanities ($20,000).
2004 Startup Grant in support of the Western Institute for Irish Studies. Funded by the Cultural Division of the Department of Foreign Affairs of the Government of Ireland ($25,000).
2003-2005 Startup Grant in support of the “The Irish American West: A Hypertext Corpus of Texts and Research.” Funded by the Stanford Humanities Laboratory ($30,000).

BOOKS

Jockers, Matthew. Macroanalysis: Methods for Digital Literary History. University of Illinois Press, 2013.[http://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/catalog/88wba3wn9780252037528.html]
Driscoll, Charles. Kansas Irish. Edited with Critical Introduction, Matthew L. Jockers, 1944, Wichita, Kansas: Rowfant Press, 2011.

REFEREED PUBLICATIONS

Jockers, Matthew L. “Testing Authorship in the Personal Writings of Joseph Smith Using NSC Classification.” Literary and Linguistic Computing. doi: 10.1093/llc/fqs041
Allison, Sarah, Ryan Heuser, Matthew Jockers, Franco Moretti, Michael Witmore. “Quantitative Formalism: An Experiment.” N+1, No. 13, Winter, (2012): 81-108. (All authors were equal contributors).
Allison, Sarah, Ryan Heuser, Matthew Jockers, Franco Moretti, Michael Witmore. “Quantitative Formalism: An Experiment.” Pamphlet 1, Stanford Literary Lab, January 15, 2011. (All authors were equal contributors).
Jockers, Matthew L. and Daniela M. Witten. “A Comparative Study of Machine Learning Methods for Authorship Attribution.” Literary and Linguistic Computing, 25.2, (2010): 215-224; doi: 10.1093/llc/fqq001 (Both authors were equal contributors).
Jockers, Matthew L., “West of Éire: Butte’s Irish Ethos.” In All Our Stories Are Here: Critical Perspectives on Montana Literature. Ed. Brady Harrison. University of Nebraska Press, (2009): 37-51.
Jockers, Matthew L., Daniela M. Witten, and Craig S. Criddle. “Reassessing Authorship of the Book of Mormon Using Delta and Nearest Shrunken Centroid Classification.” Literary and Linguistic Computing, 23.4 (2008): 465-492; doi 10.1093/llc/fqn040 (All authors were equal contributors).
—-.”A Literature of Good Fortune.” In The Irish in the San Francisco Bay Area: Essays on Good Fortune. Ed. Don Jordan and Timothy O’Keefe. San Francisco: Irish Literary and Historical Society, (2005): 8-27.
—-.”A Window Facing West: Charles Driscoll’s Kansas Irish.” New Hibernia Review. 8:3 (2004).
—-.”Another ‘Word Known to All Men’ in Joyce’s Ulysses.” Notes on Modern Irish Literature. 8 (1996): 38-40.
Jockers, Matthew and Craig Smith. “James Joyce’s Ulysses.” The Explicator. 50.4 (1992): 235-237. (Both authors were equal contributors).
Jockers, Matthew L. “Fish Story.” Colorado North Review. 33.1&2 (1992): 340-346.

NON-REFEREED PUBLICATIONS

Jockers, Matthew L., Matthew Sag and Jason Schultz. “Digital archives: don’t let copyright block data mining.” Nature. V. 490, October 4, 2012 (29-30). (All authors were equal contributors).
Jockers, Matthew L., Matthew Sag and Jason Schultz. “Brief of Digital Humanities and Law Scholars as Amici Curiae in Authors Guild v. Google.” (July 28, 2012). (All authors were equal contributors).Available at SSRN: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2102542
Jockers, Matthew L. “The Way We Read Now.” Stanford Magazine. March/April, 2008. http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2008/marapr/farm/news/books.html

PUBLISHED REVIEWS

Jockers, Matthew. Beyond the American Pale: The Irish in the West, 1845-1910. David Emmons. New Mexico Historical Review. 86:4, 2011.
—-. Last Before America: Irish and American Writing. Edited by Fran Brearton and Eamonn Hughes. Nua: Studies in Contemporary Irish Writing. Volume IV, Numbers 1 & 2, 2003.
—-. The Irish Play on the New York Stage. John P. Harrington. New Hibernia Review. 2.2 (1998): 152-153.
—-. Oscar Wilde and the Poetics of Ambiguity. Michael Gillespie. New Hibernia Review. 1.4 (1997): 157-158.
—-. From Dublin to New Orleans. Ed. Suellen Hoy and Margaret MacCurtain. Eire Ireland. 30.1 (1995): 183-185.

INVITED LECTURES

“Around the World in 3500 Novels; or Computing Ireland’s Place in the 19th Century Novel.” Center for 21st Century Studies. University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. April 18, 2013.[http://www4.uwm.edu/c21/pages/events/abstracts/13spring/jockers.html]
“The Ancient World in 19th-Century Fiction: a Macroanalysis.” Digital Classics Association Conference. University of Buffalo, SUNY, April 5-6, 2013.
“Moby Dick is God and other things my computer doesn’t know.” Columbia Center for Digital Research and Scholarship. Communicating Computational Science Conference. Columbia University, New York, April 4, 2013.
“Around the World in 3500 Novels.” Sponsored by the World Literature Program and the Department of Classical and Near Eastern Studies at Creighton University. March 22, 2013.[http://youtu.be/nYUPKq7s1yQ]
“A Matter of Style.” Boston-Area Days of DH Conference. Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, March 18, 2013 (Keynote with Julia Flanders).
“Correlating Theme, Geography and Sentiment in the 19th-Century Literary Imagination.” Catapult Center for Digital Humanities and Computational Analysis of Texts, College of Arts and Sciences, Indiana University, February 8, 2013.
“Thematic Change and Authorial Innovation in the 19th Century Novel.” Topic Modeling for Humanities Research Workshop, University of Maryland, November 3, 2012 [http://vimeo.com/52959139].
“Visualizing the 19th Century Novel.” Advanced Data Visualization Project. Columbia University, New York, October 8, 2012.
“Tracking Literary Influence in the 19th-Century Novel.” Big Data: Text Mining in the Humanities. McGill University. Montreal, 2012.
“Computing the 19th-Century Literary Genome.” Orphan Works Symposium: Orphan Works and Mass Digitization: Obstacles and Opportunities Conference. University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, April 12 – 13, 2012.
“Tracking Literary Influence in 19th-Century Novel.” University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands, February 22, 2012.
“A Voice in the Archive: Macroanalysis of the 19th-Century Novel.” University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands, February 22, 2012.
“Macroanalysis and the 19th-Century Irish Novel in English.” Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland, February 17, 2012.
“Why the 19th-Century Irish Novel in English, Isn’t.” Irish Literary and Historical Society, San Francisco, CA, October 30, 2011.
“Topic Modeling Thematic Trends in the 19th Century Novel: The Unsupervised Approach.” New Directions in Text Analysis Conference, Harvard University, May 20-21, 2011.
“Charles Driscoll’s Kansas.” Kansas Sesquicentennial Lecture, Wichita-Sedgwick County Historical Museum, March 8, 2011.
“Charles Driscoll and the Irish-American West.” Benedictine College, Atchison, KS, March 7, 2011.
“Computation, Machine Learning, and Literary Analysis.” College of Engineering. Montana State University, Bozeman, MT. December 3, 2010.
“Metadata Mining the Irish-American Literary Corpus.” University of Missouri, St. Louis, Missouri. April 26, 2007.
“Beyond Search: A Macro-Analytic Method for Literary Analysis.” Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois. April 24, 2007.
“The Irish Voice and the American West.” Murray State University, Murray, Kentucky, April 17, 2006.
“The Irish in the San Francisco Bay Area: Essays on Good Fortune: A Roundtable.” American Conference for Irish Studies, National Meeting, St. Louis Missouri, April 21, 2006.
“The Irish in California.” Panel Participant. Crossroads Irish-American Festival. San Francisco Main Library, San Francisco, California, March 13, 2004
“The Irish-American West.” Program for the Study of the North American West Colloquium, Stanford University, Stanford, California, March 12, 2003.
“Using Technology to Enhance Teaching.” Department of Cultural and Social Anthropology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, September 24, 2001.
“Utilizing Computer-Enriched Classrooms.” Council for Opportunity in Education, Instructional Technology Seminar, Atlanta, Georgia, May 9-13, 2001.
“Real World Reasoning.” University of Northern Colorado Greek System, November 10, 1999.
“Critical Thinking and Writing in a Non-Critical World.” McNair Scholars Program Lecture Series, University of Northern Colorado, May 17, 1999.
“Solving the Riddles in Joyce’s Ulysses.” Guest Lecture in English 629: Graduate Seminar in 20th Century British Literature, University of Northern Colorado, March 4, 1999.
“Professional Ethics.” McNair Scholars Program Lecture Series, University of Northern Colorado, February 22, 1999.
“Graduate Research in the Humanities.” McNair Scholars Program Lecture Series, University of Northern Colorado, November 17-18, 1998.
“In Search of Tir-na-Nog: Irish-American Literature in the West.” Chicago Irish Studies Seminar, Chicago Historical Society, Chicago, Illinois, January 24, 1998.
“From Bog to Sod: Irish-American Fiction in the West.” Guest Lecture in English 579: Graduate Seminar in Irish-American Fiction, Southern Illinois University, 1997.
“James Joyce’s Dubliners and the Modern Short Story.” Guest Lecture in English 260: Masterpieces of English Literature, University of Northern Colorado, 1993.
“Opening Address to Graduating Class.” May 14, 1993. Graduate Commencement, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley.

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS

Jockers, Matthew. “Rebooting Graduate Training: Collaboration, Computing, and the New Thesis.” Panel organized by the Discussion Group on Computer Studies in Language and Literature. Modern Language Association National Meeting, Boston, MA. January 7, 2013. Invited Panelist.
—-. “Theories and Practices of the Literary Lab.” Modern Language Association National Meeting, Boston, MA. January 3, 2013. Invited Panelist.
—-. “Getting Started in Digital Humanities with Help from DHCommons.” Digital Humanities Commons MLA Workshop hosted by Northeastern University, Boston, MA, January 3, 2013. Invited Panelist.
Jockers, Matthew with Ben Allen, Cameron Blevins, and Ryan Heuser. A Geography of Nineteenth-Century English and American Literature. Social Science History Association, 37th Annual Meeting, Vancouver, British Columbia, November 2, 2012. (All authors were equal contributors).
Jockers, Matthew L., “Computing and Visualizing the 19th Century Literary Genome.” Paper presented at Digital Humanities Conference 2012, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, July 16 – 22, 2012 (pp. 242-244). Refereed Paper.
—-. “The Inevitability of Influence: Tracking Thematic and Stylistic Change in 19th-Century American Fiction.” 23rd Annual Conference of the American Literature Association, San Francisco, CA, May 24-27, 2012. Invited Panel Paper.
—-. “Irish Literature in the American West.” Crossroads Irish-American Festival, University of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, March 25, 2012. Invited Panelist.
—-. “Detecting and Characterizing National Style in the 19th Century Novel.” Paper presented at Digital Humanities Conference 2011, Stanford University, Stanford CA, June 19 – 22, 2011 (pp. 159-160). Refereed Paper.
—-. “#alt-ac: Alternative Paths, Pitfalls, and Jobs in the Digital Humanities.“ Panel organized by the Discussion Group on Computer Studies in Language and Literature. Modern Language Association National Meeting, Seattle, WA. January 7, 2011. Invited Panel.
—-. “What Makes an Irish Novel Irish: Toward a Stylistic and Thematic Definition of the 19th Century Irish Novel.” 2011 International Conference on Narrative, Washington University, St. Louis, MO, April 7-10, 2011. Refereed Paper.
—-. “The Devil’s in the Data: Literature as Macro-System.” Conference of the Society for Literature, Science and the Arts, Indianapolis, IN, October 28-31, 2010. Invited Paper.
—-. “Defining Irish Style: A Computational Stylistics of Irish and British Prose.” Western Regional Meeting of the American Conference for Irish Studies, Boise, ID, October 1-3, 2010. Refereed Paper.
—-. “Testing Authorship in the Personal Writings of Joseph Smith Using NSC Classification.” Paper presented at Digital Humanities Conference 2009, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, June 22 – 25, 2009. Refereed Paper.
—-. “Methodologies for Literary Studies in the Digital Age.” Modern Language Association National Meeting, San Francisco, CA, December 2008. Invited Paper.
Jockers, Matthew L., Glen Worthey, Joe Shapiro, and Sarah Allison. “Beyond Search: Literary Studies and the Digital Library.” Paper presented at Digital Humanities Conference 2008, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland, June 25 – 29, 2008 (pp. 13-15). Refereed Panel.
Jockers, Matthew L., “Beyond Boston: Geo-Referencing Irish-American Literature.” Modern Language Association National Meeting, Chicago, IL, December 2007. Invited Paper.
—-. “Macro-Analysis (2.0).” Paper presented at Digital Humanities Conference 2007. University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, IL, June 2-8, 2007 (pp. 103-104). Refereed Paper.
—-. “Kathleen Norris: An Irish Author of Some Importance.” Western Regional Meeting of the American Conference for Irish Studies, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, October 14-16, 2005. Refereed Paper.
—-.”Electronic Text Analysis and a New Methodology for Canonical Research.” Alternate Title: “A Macro-Economic Model for Literary Research.” In ACH/ALLC 2005. Humanities Computing and Media Center, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC. Paper presented at 17th Joint International Conference of the Association for Computing in the Humanities and the Association of Literary and Linguistic Computing, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada, June 15-18, 2005 (pp. 215-218). Refereed Paper.
—-. “Making and Mining a Digital Archive: the Case of the Irish-American West Project.” American Conference for Irish Studies, National Meeting, Liverpool, England, July 12-16, 2004. Refereed Paper.
—-. “From the Parks of Menlough to Menlo Park: Irish Writing in California.” American Conference for Irish Studies, National Meeting, Minneapolis, MN, June 4-7, 2003. Refereed Paper.
—-. “The American West in Modern and Contemporary Irish Fiction.” Western Regional Meeting of the American Conference for Irish Studies, Santa Clara, CA, October 11-13, 2002. Refereed Paper.
—-. “The Image of the American West in Irish Literature.” Annual Meeting of the Society for the Interdisciplinary Study of Social Imagery, Colorado Springs, CO, March, 1999. Refereed Paper.
—-. “Literary Evidence of the Irish in Montana.” Midwest regional meeting of the American Conference for Irish Studies, University of Detroit, Mercy, Detroit, MI, October, 1994. Refereed Paper.
—-. “Richard Murphy and the British/Irish Identity.” Irish Studies Colloquium, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Carbondale, IL, March, 1994.
—-. “‘The [Real] Word Known to All Men’ in James Joyce’s Ulysses.” Midwest regional meeting of the American Conference for Irish Studies, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Carbondale, IL, October, 1992. Refereed Paper.
—-. “An Unknown Word in Joyce’s Ulysses.” University Research Day, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, CO, March, 1992.

SERVICE: UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA

Subcommittee on Graduate Web Presence. 2013
Digital Humanities Certificate Advisory Board. 2012-Present.
Digital Humanities Minor Coordinator. 2012-Present
Informatics Minor (Exploratory Committee). 2012-Present

SERVICE: OTHER PROFESSIONAL

Associate Editor (with Kay Walter and Glen Worthey), Literary and Linguistic Computing. Special issue of papers from the 2011 Digital Humanities Conference, 2013.
Program Committee, Association for Computational Linguistics, 2012
Hathi Trust Research Center Advisory Board, 2011-Present.
Local Host (with Glen Worthey) of “DH 2011,” the annual Conference of the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO), Stanford University, June 19-24, 2011.
Executive Council Member (elected), Association for Computers in the Humanities, 2008 – 2012.
Peer Reviewer, European Research Council, 2010
Secretary (appointed), American Conference for Irish Studies (4/2005 – 2009).
Editor, American Conference for Irish Studies Newsletter (2003 – 2005).
Web Master, American Conference for Irish Studies (2003 – 2009).
Peer Reviewer, Digital Studies/Le champ numerique (DS/CN), The Journal of the Society for Digital Humanities in Canada, 2009
Developed an online voting system for the TEI Consortium (2008)
Peer Reviewer, Literary and Linguistic Computing, 2008 – Present
Peer Reviewer, ACH/ALLC/SDH-SEMI Joint Digital Humanities Conference, 2008-Present.
Peer Reviewer, Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), 2008.
Peer Reviewer, NEH/DOE Humanities High Performance Computing Grants, 2008.
Peer Reviewer, Social Science and Humanities Research Council, Canada, 2005.

LANGUAGES, DATABASES, AND OPERATING SYSTEMS

Natural: Reading Knowledge of Spanish and Old English
Programing and Markup: R, Python, PHP, XML, XSLT, XSL-FO, XHTML, CSS, CDML, JAVA, JavaScript
Databases: MySql, FileMaker
Operating Systems: UNIX, LINUX, Mac, Windows

AWARDS AND DISTINCTIONS

Recognized for Outstanding Teaching, Faculty Recognition Banquet, University of Northern Colorado, 2000.
Inducted into Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society, Southern Illinois University, 1995.
Graduate Dean’s Citation for Excellence, University of Northern Colorado, 1993.
Mae Cross Scholarship, University of Northern Colorado, 1992.
Inducted into Sigma Tau Delta English Honor Society, University of Northern Colorado, 1992.
Graduate School Academic Fellowship, University of Northern Colorado, 1991 &1992.

COURSES

UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA

“National Literatures: Irish Literature.” Fall 2012
“English Capstone: Ulysses.” Spring 2013

STANFORD UNIVERSITY

“Ad Hoc Seminar in Corpus Stylistics,” 2009 (graduate course)
“Literary Studies and the Digital Library,” 2009, 2010 (graduate course)
“Digital Humanities: Beyond the Book,” 2008, 2012
“Digital Humanities: Literature and Technology,” 2004, 2005, 2007
“Electronic Data, Literary Theory,” Co-Taught with Franco Moretti, 2003 (graduate course)
“Irish-American Literature,” 2002, 2003, 2004 & 2005
“Pedagogy Seminar I,” Co-Taught with Andrea Lunsford, 2001

UNIVERSITY OF NORTHERN COLORADO

“Computer Applications for Composition,” 1997 – 2001
“College Composition,” 1990 – 1993, 1997 – 2001
“College Research Paper,” 1990 – 1993, 1997 – 2001
“Critical Thinking and Writing,” 1997 – 2001
“Introduction to Literature,” 1993
“James Joyce’s Ulysses,” 1993

SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY

“College Composition I,” 1993-1995
“College Composition II,” 1993-1995
“The Western Literary Tradition,” 1994
“Intermediate Expository Writing,” 1994

WORKSHOPS

“Text Analysis and Topic Modeling in the Humanities.” Center for 21st Century Studies. University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. April 19, 2013.
“Large-Scale Text Analysis with R.” Digital Humanities Winter Institute, University of Maryland, January 7 – 11, 2013.
“Introduction to Topic Modeling.” Digital Humanities Commons MLA Workshop hosted by Northeastern University, Boston, MA, January 3, 2013.
“Macroanalysis with R.” Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland, February 16, 2012.
“The Good Web.” MLA Workshop. Co-Instructor with Susan Schreibman. Modern Language Association, National Meeting, San Francisco, CA, 2008.
“XML and XSLT Workshop.” Co-Instructor with Susan Schreibman. Humanities Computing Summer Institute. University of Victoria, Victoria, BC. June 24-30, 2004.
“Introduction to Web Design.” Co-Instructor. Stanford University Academy for New Media. July 23-27, 2001.
“Introduction to 3-D Animation.” Co-Instructor. Stanford University Academy for New Media. July 9-13, 2001.
“Designing a Course Web Site with Macromedia DreamWeaver and Fireworks.” Stanford University, June 26 & 28, 2001.
“Using Endnote for Research and Writing.” Stanford University, Fall, Winter, and Spring 2003-2006 ongoing presentations.
“Organizing and Managing Macintosh Files and Software.” Stanford University, April 27, 2001.
“Troubleshooting and Maintaining the Macintosh.” Stanford University, April 20, 2001.
“Finding Scholarships on the World Wide Web.” Cornerstone Workshop Series, University of Northern Colorado, September 15, 1999.
“Publishing on the World Wide Web.” Cornerstone Lecture Series, University of Northern Colorado, 1997.

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS

American Conference for Irish Studies
Association for Computers in the Humanities
Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing
International Society for the Study of Narrative
Modern Language Association
Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts

MEDIA COVERAGE

INTERVIEWS

Stoddart, Charlotte. “Digital Humanities: Interview with Matthew Jockers.” Nature Podcast. Nature Publishing Group. October 4, 2012.
Montcrieff, Sean. “Data Mining the Classics: interview with Matthew Jockers.” Newstalk Ireland, August 29th, 2012.
Bourbeau, Sharon. “Interview with Matthew Jockers.” College Connection, Produced by the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education. June 12, 2010. (Interview begins at minute 8:16)
“Irish-American Culture and Literature.” March 17, 1993. KFKA Radio, Greeley, Colorado.

PRESS

Lohr, Steve. “Dickens, Austen and Twain, Through a Digital Lens.” New York Times. January 26, 2013. [A version of this article appeared in print on January 27, 2013, on page BU3 of the New York edition.]
Piper, Andrew. “Literary Lab MLA Wrap-Up #3.” CitLab. University of McGill. January 22, 2013..
LaDue Emily. “liteRatuRe. theoRy. macRo. gRaph. (aRt?) Ready. stat.” Culturelab, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania. January 11, 2013.
Pannapacker, William. “Rebooting Graduate Education in the Humanities.” Chronicle of Higher Education. Tuesday, January 8, 2013.
Staff. “By text-mining the classics, UNL prof unearths new literary insights.” UNL News Blog. Thursday, August 23rd, 2012. .
More Coverage at:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/08/120827073906.htm

http://www.newswise.com/articles/by-text-mining-the-classics-unl-professor-unearths-new-literary-insights

http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/smartnews/2012/08/data-mining-the-classics-clusters-women-authors-together-puts-mellville-out-on-a-raft/

http://www.nyest.hu/hirek/a-legbefolyasosabb-viktorianus-regenyiro

Coldewey, Devin. “Data mining the classics makes for beautiful science.” Future of Tech on NBC News. August 20, 2012.
Clark, Liat. “Novel Text Analysis Uses PageRank to Identify Influential Victorian Authors.” Wired, August 17, 2012.
Giles, Jim. “Software Reveals the most Influential Victorian Novelists.” New Scientist, August 8, 2012.
Kofman, Nicole, “Recasting the Humanities Through “Distant Reading.’” The Stanford Daily, November, 28, 2011. .
Patricia Cohen, “Computing, Rather Than, Absorbing Novels.” New York Times, December 4, 2010. .
Maggie Beidelman, “Digitizing the Humanities.” Palo Alto Patch, December 2, 2010. .
Haven, Cynthia, “Non-consumptive research? Text mining? Welcome to the hotspot of humanities research at Stanford.” Stanford Report, December 1, 2010. .
Roque, Antonio.”Digital Humanities and Language Technology,” IEEE, Signal Processing Society Newsletter, July 2010. .
Interviewed by Sharon Bourbeau for the weekly radio program “College Connection”. Discussion of macroanalysis and how literary scholars are tapping into digital libraries. Interview begins at minute 8:16 of the audio file. .
“Crunching Words in Great Number.” Chronicle of Higher Education, June 3, 2010. .
Parry, Marc. “The Humanities Go Google.” Chronicle of Higher Education, May 28, 2010. .
“Stanford Students Use Digital Tools to Analyze Classic Texts.” The Human Experience: Inside the Humanities At Stanford. May 21, 2010. .
Parry, Marc. “Google Starts Grant Program for Studies of Its Digitized Books.” Chronicle of Higher Education, March 31, 2010. .
Shea, Christopher. “The Geography of Irish-American Lit.” Boston Globe, Online Edition, July 30, 2008. .
Howard, Jennifer. “Literary Geospaces.” Chronicle of Higher Education, August 1, 2008. .
“The Bard in Bits and Bytes.” Stanford Magazine, Stanford University, March/April 2007. .
Text Analysis Developers Alliance Blog, “Data Analysis Tools Mine Literary Data Sets.” May 2005. .