Rachel Hendery is Associate Professor of Digital Humanities at Western Sydney University. Her background is in linguistics, and she works on language contact and change, particularly in the Pacific, and how new digital tools and techniques allow us to research these in new ways. Her research interests include historical linguistics, contact linguistics, typology, mapping, simulation, virtual reality, and data visualisation.
In terms of the future of the humanities, arts and social sciences in Australia, Rachel is particularly interested in how we can build bridges between traditionally siloed disciplines, and how we can make best use of technological progress in our rapidly changing world to allow us to address research questions in new and exciting ways. She is interested in open, collaborative scholarship.
Rachel has led and contributed to a number of large-scale research projects: ‘Change in language-culture and identity in a small isolated community’, ‘Howitt and Fison’s Archive: Insights into Australian Aboriginal Language, Kinship and Culture’ led by Helen Gardner at Deakin University, Mapping Print; Charting Enlightenment, led by Simon Burrows at Western Sydney University, Waves of Words: Mapping and modelling the history of Australia’s Asia-Pacific ties, and Seeing Yourself in Digital Cultural Heritage, both of which she leads at Western Sydney University.
Rachel was President of the Australasian Association for Digital Humanities 2022-2023 and ran the international summer school DH Downunder for a number of years. She is a member of the Canadian-Australian Partnership for Open Scholarship (CAPOS) and involved through this in the INKE project (Implementing New Knowledge Environments). Rachel is also a member of the MARCS Institute for Brain, Behaviour and Development, and has been a member of the Centre of Excellence for Language Dynamics and the Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage. Rachel also co-leads the Intergener8 Living Lab at Western Sydney University.