Library of Congress Kluge Fellowship in Digital Studies

Call illustration

The Kluge Fellowship in Digital Studies provides an opportunity for scholars to utilize digital methods, the Library’s large and varied digital collections and resources, curatorial expertise, and an emerging community of digital scholarship practitioners. Interdisciplinary and cross-cultural research is particularly welcome in the Kluge Digital Studies program. The fellowship is open to scholars from all disciplines with special consideration given to those whose projects demonstrate relevance to the challenges facing democracies in the 21st century. The Digital Studies Fellowship supports a wide array of academic work that encompasses digital scholarship, digital humanities, data science, data analysis, data visualization, and digital publishing that utilize digital collections, tools, and methods. Fellows will have the opportunity to engage with various digital departments in the Library of Congress while pursing and sharing their research.

Application and Selection

The Library's John W. Kluge Center seeks proposals from scholars worldwide that will generate deep, empirically-grounded understanding of the consequences of the digital revolution on how people think, how society functions, and how international relations shift. Proposals may also explore and analyze emerging trends and new phenomena that may generate consequential changes in the future. All proposals must state the importance of the research to fundamental thinking about the human condition.

Scholars should include a discussion of how the resources of the Library of Congress will inform the intended research. Resources at the Library of Congress include:

  • The National Digital Library (loc.gov/collections) with more than 30 million online documents in support of the study of the history and culture of the United States available via an Application Programming Interface (API) at https://libraryofcongress.github.io/data-exploration/
  • The Library of Congress web archiving program, which preserves millions of websites pertaining to significant events such as the terror attacks of 9/11 and United States Presidential elections
  • The National Digital Newspaper Program of more than 15 million newspaper pages available via API and with text and image bulk downloads (https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/about/api/) The Records of the U.S. Copyright Office, including digital deposits
  • The Law Library of Congress collection of more than 2.8 million law books and other legal resources
  • The Library's general collection of 35 million book volumes
  • The Library's subscriptions to e-journals and electronic databases

Scholars are encouraged to think creatively about how the Library's collections may inform their work and expand the impact of their research.

Please note: Although the Library of Congress continues to collect and archive select tweets, the Twitter Archive is not currently available to researchers.

Read more about the application and selection process 

 

Institution
Application date
Duration
Up to 11 months
Discipline
Humanities
Social sciences