Postcolonial digital humanities has taken shape recently as an emergent academic field. Its lineage reaches back to the 1990s, when scholars Deepika Bahri and George Landow first created websites such as "Postcolonial Studies at Emory" (original version) and "The Postcolonial Literature and Culture Web." These scholars marshaled the text-based internet culture of Web 1.0 to establish sites of knowledge; identify key terms, theorists, and stakes for postcolonial studies; and to publicize the field. This website website addresses these opportunities by outlining the shape of the contemporary 'postcolonial digital humanities' through interrogating the ways postcolonial studies has evolved through different phases of internet culture from the original Web 1.0 postcolonial websites, to the "transmedia" shift beginning in the mid-2000s, to the later move to Web 2.0 and the rise of social media cultures.
Ce site propose un survol des ouvrages publiés en français par les femmes écrivains du continent africain, au sud du Sahara. Il vous permet de découvrir leurs romans, leurs nouvelles, leurs pièces de théâtre, leur poésie, quelques textes inédits et des interviews
The Digital Library of the Caribbean (dLOC) is a cooperative digital library for resources from and about the Caribbean and circum-Caribbean. dLOC provides access to digitized versions of Caribbean cultural, historical and research materials currently held in archives, libraries, and private collections.
Le guide didattiche online di Paul Brians (Department of English, Washington State University) su vari romanzi di autori tra cui Chinua Achebe, Buchi Emecheta, Wole Soyinka, Athol Fugard, Nadine Gordimer, George Lamming, R.K.Narayan, Salman Rushdie, Arundhati Roy, Anita Desai
This French-language site, designed and hosted at the City University of New York and associated with a French non-profit educational association, focuses on the history, society, and literature of various French-speaking islands located throughout the world.