I hasten to say that there are lots of other paths. For instance, yes, you can do it the other way around. There are great English/History programs that will support your forays into other disciplines. My tweet (which I'm going to pin) is about "the path of least resistance rn."
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People don't know that path exists. But it exists, and the people pursuing it are sometimes getting multiple job offers.
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What did you put in your coffee this morning? I see you came ready for action.


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It really is all about caffeine levels, I'm afraid. :)
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This is the career path I wish I’d known about when I was younger...
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If you take this path for LIS, as I did, you will particularly find that a lot of current DH questions/projects have been the subject of some corners of LIS literature for a good long while.
Kiitos. Käytämme tätä aikajanasi parantamiseen. KumoaKumoa
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Email me <tunder at illinois, dot edu>, because there's lots of situation-dependent stuff. But the threshold for stuff-you-already-hafta-know may be lower than you might fear. A persuasive project proposal can carry you far in applications.
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Just to add a small tidbit here. Yes, English departments will give you some flexibility in your math/cs adventures. But, especially when it comes to coursework, there are some institutional boundaries that are difficult to work around
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And, yes, there are jobs where you can use cs to study literary/cultural history. I have no complaints so far.
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