Digital Humanities Summer Fellowships

scholars in the fellowship program having a lively discussion at the conference table

The Simpson Center offers annual summer fellowships for faculty and graduate students to pursue research projects that use digital technologies in innovative and intensive ways and/or explore the historical, social, aesthetic, and cross-cultural implications of digital cultures. The program has three primary goals:

  • To animate knowledge—using rich media, dynamic databases, and visualization tools
  • To circulate knowledge—among diverse publics
  • To understand digital culture—historically, theoretically, aesthetically, and generatively

The Simpson Center gratefully acknowledges the support of a National Endowment for the Humanities Challenge Grant and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation as well as many donors to the endowment which is underwriting these fellowships.

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Cohort Archives

2026 - 2027 Digital Humanities Summer Fellows

Mal Ahern looks at a roll of film that has been unwound.
Assistant Professor
Cinema & Media Studies
Ashfaq Ahmed
PhD Candidate
Jackson School of International Studies
Vanessa de Veritch Woodside
Associate Professor
School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, UW Tacoma
Andrew Hedding
Assistant Professor
Linguistics
Meichun Liu
Assistant Professor
School of Art + Art History + Design
Nikoloz Nadirashvili
PhD Candidate
School of Art + Art History + Design
Paul Jason Perez
PhD Candidate
Information School
Simpson Center Logo
PhD Candidate
Asian Languages & Literature
Jingrui Yan
PhD Candidate
Cinema & Media Studies

2017 - 2018 Digital Humanities Summer Fellow

Portrait of Jade Power-Sotomayor

Jade Power-Sotomayor (she/her/hers)

Assistant Professor

The Bomba Wiki Project: Oral, Aural, and Corporeal History and Community-Making through Bomba Music and Dance

Jade Power-Sotomayor, in collaboration with José I. Fusté, is developing a web archive of Afro-Puerto Rican bomba music and dance history and practice. We will use a wiki platform to establish a bilingual, digital, open-source repository that mirrors the non-linear, protean, call-and-response nature of how bomba knowledge has been exchanged throughout its long evolution. The project will centralize, document, archive, and index ideas about bomba, facts, and expressions while cataloguing this dynamic content and making it searchable.