[AI Summary]: This comprehensive review presents “¡Hola, mundo! Humanidades digitales en América Latina” as a groundbreaking publication featuring ten contributions from authors across Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, and Mexico, selected from over sixty proposals. The book represents the first volume on Latin American digital humanities written from within the region by researchers working in their own contexts, offering a situated and plural perspective distinct from Global North publications. Organized into three sections—data and digital infrastructures, teaching digital humanities, and regional forms of digital humanities—the work addresses critical issues including minimal computing as a response to resource limitations, interoperability challenges in archaeological databases, pedagogical experiences at UNAM, and innovative projects linking art curation, social movements, and computational literature.
- Editors: María José Afanador-Llach, Gimena del Río Riande, Ernesto Priani Saisó
- Contributors: Authors from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico
- Topics: Digital archives, minimal computing, DH pedagogy, social movements, art curation
- Language: Spanish
- Significance: First DH book written from and for Latin America by regional researchers