Digital Arts, Sciences & Technologies @ UNC Charlotte
Digital Arts, Sciences & Technologies @ UNC Charlotte
A College of Liberal Arts & Sciences Initiative

Contributors

  • Aaron Shapiro
  • Aaron Toscano
  • Akinwumi Ogundiran
  • Alan Rauch
  • Alexander Chapin
  • Anita Blanchard
  • Balaka Basu
  • Debra Smith
  • Elise Berman
  • Elizabeth Miller
  • Franz Prichard
  • Gordon Hull
  • Gregory Wickliff
  • Joan Mullin
  • Jon Crane
  • Juan Meneses Naranjo
  • Julia Moore
  • JuliAnna Avila
  • Kai-Uwe Werbeck
  • Lara Vetter
  • Marvin Croy
  • Min Jiang
  • Nicole Peterson
  • Peter Thorsheim
  • Pilar Blitvich
  • Rachel Plotnick
  • Robin James
  • Shawn Long
  • Xingjian Liu
  • DAST @ UNC Charlotte
  • DAST Brown Bags
  • People
  • Contact Us

Links

  • Atkins Library Digital Scholarship Lab
  • CLAS Connections
  • CLAS Office of Academic Technologies

Disciplines

  • Africana Studies
  • Anthropology
  • Communication Studies
  • English
  • Geography and Earth Sciences
  • History
  • Languages and Culture Studies
  • Philosophy
  • Psychology
  • Religious Studies
  • UWP

Connections

AI algorithm belonging big (small) data BRICS China community cybersecurity Digital History digital sovereignty Education entitativity Environment geopolitics GIS Global South groups health Internet knowledge media membership online organizations Photography policy politics power privacy psychology Rhetoric Science sense of community social media support Technology virtual work
Assistant Professor, Department of Communication Studies
AUTHOR

Rachel Plotnick

Rachel Plotnick

October 12, 2013 by Rachel Plotnick
disciplines: Communication Studies

Research Interests

  • User Interfaces
  • History of Information/Communication/Media Technologies
  • Human-Machine Relationships
  • Science and Technology Studies

Research Projects

Current

Specifically related to digital humanities:

“The Button Archive”
http://www.rachelplotnick.com/button/

My hope is to digitize the materials I have collected related to push buttons and to make an accessible archive. This is a time consuming process, however, and without funds (or much time), I haven’t been able to devote much effort to this project.

Past

Specifically related to digital humanities:

“Dad’s Cancer: A Multimedia Illness Narrative Experiment”
http://gnovisjournal.org/2007/08/19/dads-cancer-a-multimedia-illness-narrative-experiment/
This was a digital chapter of my master’s thesis (the version online is low quality and compressed compared to the original).

Teaching Projects

Current

Past

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