
Bethany Nowviskie
Digital Research & Scholarship - University of Virginia Library
Associate DirectorThe Scholarly Communication Institute - University of Virginia Library

Contact Info
Email: bethany@Virginia.edu
About:
Bethany Nowviskie is Director of Digital Research & Scholarship at the University of Virginia Library. She holds a doctoral degree in English Language and Literature from the University of Virginia and has taught courses in writing, poetry, bibliography, and new media aesthetics and design. Among her digital projects, through IATH and UVA’s SpecLab, are the Rossetti Archive (for which she served as project manager and design editor) and Temporal Modelling. From 2004-2007, as a postdoctoral fellow and later a member of UVA’s research faculty, she developed software and social systems for NINES, the “networked infrastructure for nineteenth-century electronic scholarship.” These included Collex, Juxta, and the Ivanhoe Game. She currently directs two NEH-funded projects, the Institute for Enabling Geospatial Scholarship and Neatline: Facilitating Geospatial and Temporal Interpretation of Archival Collections.
In addition to SCI, Nowviskie’s work at the University of Virginia Library includes oversight of the Scholars’ Lab, which combines the services and resources of UVA’s former Etext, GeoStat, and Research Computing Support Centers. The Scholars’ Lab hosts public programs on the impact of new media and methods on the scholarly endeavor, and also sponsors a Graduate Fellowship in Digital Humanities. Nowviskie additionally manages a “Digital Scholarship R&D” department, providing consultation, programming support, and infrastructure for innovative work in the humanities and social sciences.
Bethany Nowviskie is vice-president of the Association for Computers and the Humanities (ACH) and a founding member of the executive council of NINES. Her own research interests lie in the intersection of algorithmic or procedural method and traditional humanities interpretation. Nowviskie is currently working on a scholarly edition of A.C. Swinburne’s 1866 Poems and Ballads, and on two small creatures under the age of six.