MITH ProjectText-Image Linking Environment

The Text-Image Linking Environment (TILE) is a web-based tool for creating and editing image-based electronic editions and digital archives of humanities texts.

MITH ProjectVisual Accent and Dialect Archive

The Visual Accent & Dialect Archive (VADA) is an archive of video clips from around the world, providing both aural and visual information about an accent or dialogue.

MITH ProjectShelley-Godwin Archive

A digital resource comprising works of Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin, Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley. These manuscripts and early editions will be made freely available to the public through an innovative framework constituting a new model of best practice for research libraries.

«   »
Research & Projects

Events & Community

2/14 MITH Digital Dialogue: Melanie Kill, “Knowledge and Meaning in the Information Age: A Humanist Perspective on Wikipedia”

Tuesday, February 14, 12:30-1:45PM MITH Conference Room, B0135 McKeldin Library Co-sponsored by the Department of English “Knowledge and Meaning in the Information Age: A Humanist Perspective on Wikipedia” by MELANIE KILL Over the past decade, Wikipedia has drawn together a community of volunteer editors, translators, and programmers who have created . . .


Extremely Visible and Incredibly Close Reading of Logos

The Foreign Literatures in America (FLA) project’s intellectual goals present a graphic design challenge marked by a delicate balance. We’re creating an archive that will demonstrate how the idea of Americanness has been shaped by actors beyond those traditionally labelled “American”; how do we create a logo and other graphic . . .


The DLC is Back!

The Deena Larsen Collection (DLC) is back up and running. Thank you for your patience while we fixed the website.


Former MITHer Doug Reside Featured in The New York Times

Former MITH Associate Director Doug Reside, now Digital Curator for the Performing Arts at the New York Public Library, was recently covered by Jennifer Schuessler in “Tale of the Floppy Disks: How Jonathan Larsen Created ‘Rent’” on The New York Times Arts Beat blog. The article highlights Doug’s research on . . .