breadth and depth, a self-centered dialectic
Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about that canonical debate around depth vs. breadth in digital humanities (DH). I remember initially my reaction was feeling that “true” DHers should be both, that this was an aptitude anyone could and should develop in the spirit of the discipline.1 After much method trial-and-error, I then grew frustrated that I hadn’t found “my thing” and disappointed to think I could only do DH in breadth, not depth. I was bound to a path instead of choosing one. Eventually, I decided I didn’t care for the division at all.
Lately, though, I’ve started wondering, what if the question has multiple axes acting simultaneously? What if breadth leads to depth, the opposite happens, or something else altogether? What if, instead of choosing a path, it emerges, for each one of us, from our own individual way of sharing, problem-solving, organizing, and researching?
In my “failing” to become an expert at one single thing calling out to me, I had no choice but accepting and recognizing the value of breadth, and inevitability of failure—another core DH moment—even if my perceived failure was personal in nature.2 But the beauty of “rock bottoms” is that they create an opportunity for radical change because one’s ego is finally humble enough to give up on what isn’t working and engage in earnest reflection, even start over. ON/OFF. Unplug and replug. It’s a time to accept losses and reassess them against growth, assets, skills, experience, effort, connections. What did you learn in the process? In DH, the process is key.3
Through the process, I learned I’ve been wrong all along: depth & breath are really two sides of the same coin. What separates us should be instead the base principles for a constructive bridge uniting DH inquiry. I used to think that not knowing and being new to the tools of an environment was a disadvantage (breadth+1), but it turns out specialists (depth+1) often don’t remember what a beginner feels or needs, precisely because they have intimate knowledge of their fields. The specialist (depth+1) is always iterating over their craft, perfecting techniques or creating new ones, deeply connected to the innovations of peers, organizations, and entities influencing their work. Generalists (breadth+1), typically, pay attention to what’s going on in multiple fields, who’s working where, what is the budget distribution, how do you get more students in to apply for your programs, how do you process their applications. DH emerges from a delicate act of balancing out critical responsibilities among experts of both kinds, each deeply attuned to their own and each other’s tasks.
Revisiting this discussion with recent insights, I realized that, as far as the depth & breadth goes, I am through and through a digital humanist in breadth (of course, an oxymoron). This is how my brain works. I have a good instinct for quickly finding unusual connections between topics, and a curiosity for learning anything, so I end up knowing a little bit about many things, not much about anything at all. I used to badly resent this indecisiveness in my learning pattern, the inability to choose and stick to one thing passionately forever, but I have been reworking this perspective to understand that what I am is flexible, curious, nimble. This is a quality that makes me good at handling unknown situations, at learning how to learn new things on my own, and at translating that knowledge of the learning process to expert audiences.
And yet, over time, I have found myself going back to specific projects, questions, topics. I keep thinking about design, minimal computing, pedagogy, infrastructures, technology, small datasets, and collaborative work, for example, over and over again in recent years. These are now inescapable research areas for me. Won’t this path of ceaseless returning eventually lead to depth as projects grow and change from recurring personal concerns, interests? Maybe we all become breadth/depth hybrids if we spend long enough earnestly engaging DH work, which is kind of pretty, it means connection awaits at the center where both axes intersect.
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See, for example, Brandon Walsh’s blog entry “Breadth And Depth in DH Professional Development” (May 12 2023); Matthew Lincoln’s blog entry “Depth-First DH” (24 Aug 2014). ↩
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Check out Quinn Daedal’s “Toward a Taxonomy of Failure” for a few personal case studies of professional failure, and the pivotal edited volume Reframing Failure in Digital Scholarship (2025). ↩
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There’s an edited volume around this topic, On Making in the Digital Humanities (2023), and there’s the oldie but goldie “Process as Product: Scholarly Communication Experiments in the Digital Humanities” (2012) by Coble et al, where scholars discuss process as approached in the digital publication sphere. ↩