School of Literature, Languages and Linguistics
ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences
Tyne Daile Sumner is an ARC DECRA Fellow in English and Digital Humanities
She has expertise in twentieth and twenty-first century literature, surveillance, poetry and poetics, and digital culture. Dr Sumner is based in the English Department & Digital Research Hub, in the School of Literature, Languages and Linguistics, and has affiliations with the Centre for Australian Literary Cultures (CALC).
Her primary research examines representations of surveillance in cultural formations including literature, contemporary art, film and popular media. Dr Sumner’s current project is SurveiLit — exploring the depiction of new and emerging forms of surveillance in the contemporary global novel.
Dr Sumner is President of the Australasian Association for Digital Humanities (aaDH) and has over 15 years experience in digital methods and tools in the arts and humanities. She often speaks on public, interdisciplinary panels about topics that cut across the humanities and technological fields, including big data, artificial intelligence, and digital ethics. She also has a tangential research interest in the life, music, and art of David Bowie.
In the 75 years since its publication, 1984 has left a lingering mark on our world – well…