Congratulations to the 2022 NYU DH Graduate Fellows!

Meet the recipients of the 2022 NYU Digital Humanities Graduate Student Fellows, sponsored by the NYU Center for Humanities, NYU Libraries, and NYU Research Technology.

05/20/2022

  Jojo Karlin

The Center for the Humanities, NYU Libraries, and NYU Research Technology fund ten Digital Humanities Graduate Fellows. These students from across NYU employ a range of DH methods whether they analyze digital sources, apply algorithmic methods to humanities data, or create digital publications, exhibits, or websites. The goal of the program is to support digital projects and bolster a sense of NYU DH Community across schools and departments.

We are excited to announce this year’s cohort of funded fellows. Congratulations to them all!


NYU DH Graduate Fellows 2022 Cohort

  • Allegra Rosenberg, XE Experimental Humanities (GSAS)
    Mapping the Victorian Polar Network
  • Antonio Musto, Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies (GSAS)
    Demystifying the Digitization of Texts: New Textual Analysis for the Medieval History of Islamic Mysticism
  • Ayami Hatanaka, Social and Cultural Analysis (GSAS)
    “Why Are There No ACS Offices in SoHO?”: and Interactive, Digital Map of Family Surveillance in New York City
  • Fatma Deniz, Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies (GSAS)
    Mapping, Visualizing and Analyzing the Sufi Mobility in the Early Modern Ottoman Empire
  • Hadas Binyamini, Hebrew & Judaic Studies (GSAS)
    Structured Data, Mapping, and Textual Analysis of the American Jewish Year Book
  • Helen Frances Stec, XE Experimental Humanities (GSAS)
    The Brownies’ Book Archive
  • Lynn Chenel, Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies (GSAS)
    The Directory of Placenames Unforgotten
  • Nuala Caomhanach, History (GSAS)
    The Land of the Giants: Digitally UnMapping Madagascar’s Plant Diversity
  • Oscar Maria Stuhler, Sociology (GSAS)
    Who Kisses Whom? Gendered Interaction in American Novels (1880-2000)
  • Ryan Zohar, Dual Degree Near Eastern Studies (GSAS) and Palmer School (LIU)
    Mapping the Circulation of Mizrahi Texts in the Arab World, 1948-1982