Exploring African Digital Humanities Using the Journal of the Digital Humanities Association of Southern Africa
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55492/dhasa.v6i01.6722Keywords:
African Digital Humanities, Digital Humanities Mapping, Digital Humanities TrendsAbstract
Digital Humanities scholarship is often framed through paradigms developed in the Global North, leaving African-specific practices and epistemologies underexplored. In this article, I use topic modelling and lexical analysis to investigate what constitutes African DH by analysing 41 Southern African DH articles. The findings indicate that the majority of publications in JDHASA engage deeply with language-related topics. The field combines advanced computational methods with a strong grounding in local languages, cultural heritage, and socio-historical realities. It also reflects responsiveness to evolving digital social realities, addressing themes such as online harm, misinformation, and affective communities. This article contributes to the theorisation of African DH by identifying thematic tendencies and methodological patterns specific to the Southern African context. It highlights the dual focus on computational innovation and cultural rootedness, offering an empirically grounded foundation for further critical engagement with what African DH is and what it can become.
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Copyright (c) 2025 Johannes Sibeko

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