This portfolio highlights several digital arts and humanities projects that I’ve engaged in through Carleton courses, extracurricular opportunities, and personal hobbies. I’m a religion major interested in bringing digital tools for presentation and analysis into the humanities as well as incorporating humanities conversations into the realm of digital scholarship and debates about technology and data.
My interest in the study of religion include sacred space and landscape, ritual and ritualization, lived religion, and postmodern critiques of early scholarship. I have approached religion from many methodological and theoretical directions including anthropology, philosophy, sociology, history, and psychology.
The projects on this site are subdivided into three overlapping categories:
Digital scholarship (including digital public history) highlights projects that used digital media to present academic work to public audiences or employed digital tools in research.
Digital pedagogy projects involved the development of digital technologies for teaching or evaluation purposes in education.
Photography and design projects used digital technologies to record and produce visuals for the purposes of education, research, or presentation.