Journal of Digital Humanities
Open Access
Open
Continuous
28% acceptance rate
Peer Review
Open
OA Type
Gold OA
Acceptance
28%
Time to Decision
8 weeks
Frequency
Continuous
APC
1,500 GBP
CiteScore (2023)
2.9
H-index (2023)
18
About This Journal
The Journal of Digital Humanities is a Taylor & Francis Academic gold open-access publication at the intersection of humanistic inquiry and digital methods. The journal publishes research that uses computational, digital, and data-driven approaches to address questions in the humanities, including literary analysis, historical research, cultural studies, and archival practice. It is committed to methodological transparency and reproducibility, and to fostering dialogue between humanists and technologists. All published code and datasets are required to be openly shared.
Aims & Scope
The Journal of Digital Humanities publishes research applying digital methods to humanistic questions:
• Text analysis and natural language processing: stylometry, topic modelling, sentiment analysis, and named entity recognition in historical and literary corpora
• Digital history: databases, GIS, network analysis, and digital archives
• Computational literary studies: distant reading, narrative modelling, and intertextuality
• Cultural analytics: large-scale quantitative analysis of cultural artefacts
• Digital cultural heritage: 3D scanning, virtual reconstruction, and digital preservation
• Digital art history: computer vision applied to artworks and visual culture
• Archival studies and data curation: metadata standards, linked open data, and long-term digital preservation
• Critical digital humanities: power, ethics, and algorithmic bias in digital humanistic research
• Tool and platform development: new software and infrastructure for humanistic research
The journal welcomes both research articles and shorter tool/project reports.
• Text analysis and natural language processing: stylometry, topic modelling, sentiment analysis, and named entity recognition in historical and literary corpora
• Digital history: databases, GIS, network analysis, and digital archives
• Computational literary studies: distant reading, narrative modelling, and intertextuality
• Cultural analytics: large-scale quantitative analysis of cultural artefacts
• Digital cultural heritage: 3D scanning, virtual reconstruction, and digital preservation
• Digital art history: computer vision applied to artworks and visual culture
• Archival studies and data curation: metadata standards, linked open data, and long-term digital preservation
• Critical digital humanities: power, ethics, and algorithmic bias in digital humanistic research
• Tool and platform development: new software and infrastructure for humanistic research
The journal welcomes both research articles and shorter tool/project reports.