Current Team

Michelle WarrenMichelle Warren (Project Lead) is Professor of Comparative Literature at Dartmouth College, where she is also  Faculty Coordinator of the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship.  Her academic interests include medieval studies, postcolonial theory, and translation. Previously, she was the Project Lead for the Research Cluster in Digital Humanities and Social Engagement at Dartmouth (2015-18), a collaborator on DanteLab at Dartmouth (2013-15), and a contributor to Parker’s Scribes at the University of Toronto (2012-15). To prepare for Remix, she has edited special issues for Digital Philology and postmedieval. Many of her publications are available on Academia.

Check our Funding page for the latest on financial support for Remix.

 

 

Laura Braunstein

Laura R. Braunstein is the Digital Humanities Librarian at the Dartmouth College Library. She has a doctorate in English from Northwestern University, where she taught writing and literature classes. She has worked as an index editor for the MLA International Bibliography, and serves as a consultant for the Schulz Library at the Center for Cartoon Studies in Vermont. Most recently, she co-edited Digital Humanities and the Library: Challenges and Opportunities for Subject SpecialistsLaura is working on Remix the Manuscript as part of her larger interest in both digital and human infrastructure for the digital humanities.

 

 

 

Neil Weijer is the curator of the Harold and Mary Jean Hanson Rare Book Collection at the University of Florida. Previously, as the CLIR Postdoctoral Curatorial Fellow in Premodern and Early Modern Studies at The Johns Hopkins University, he worked on the Archaeology of Reading in Early Modern Europe and the Virginia Fox Stern Center for the History of the Book in the Renaissance. A medievalist by training, Neil’s PhD (Johns Hopkins, 2017) used many of the surviving Brut manuscripts and printed editions to trace the history’s long and varied influence in England from the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries. He has published on the intersections between legendary history, forgery, and scholarly practice in medieval and early modern England. On Remix, Neil will be mostly working on the Re-Imagining History project.

 

Brian Guo is an undergraduate student of the Class of 2025 at Dartmouth College majoring in English. At Remix, he is a James O. Freedman Presidential Scholar exploring transcription tools and machine learning. He was drawn to Remix because of his background interest in literary theory and the theory of “the book. He hopes to explore the different possibilities that digital tools can change the meanings of reading and to bring intellectual and theoretical engagement to the mission of Remix.

 

 

 

 

 

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