Skip to content

The Digital Orientalist

Practical examples and theoretical reflections on the do's and don'ts of using digital tools for your study and research in African and Asian Studies.

Primary Navigation

  • About
    • About Us
    • Team
    • Hall of Fame
    • Our Organizational Structure
    • Newsletter
  • Topics
    • African Studies
    • AI
    • Ancient Near Eastern Studies
    • Archiving
    • Between Legal and Illegal
    • Buddhist Studies
    • Central Asian Studies
    • Chinese Language
    • Coding
    • DH in General
    • DH in Practice
    • Digital Cartography
    • Digitization
    • Equipment
    • Events & Conferences
    • Hardware
    • Housekeeping
    • Indian Studies
    • Iranian Studies
    • Islamic Studies
    • Korean Studies
    • Japanese Studies
    • Mongolian Studies
    • OCR
    • Online Resources
    • Ottoman Studies
    • Sinology
    • Social Media
    • Software
    • South Asian Studies
    • Southeast Asian Studies
    • Syriac Studies
    • Tangut Studies
    • Teaching
    • Textual Analysis
    • Theory
    • Tibetan Studies
    • Turkic Studies
    • Visualization
    • Workflow
  • Submissions
    • Submission Guidelines
  • Publications
  • Conferences
    • 2025 – “AI and the Digital Humanities”
      • Titles and Abstracts
      • Conference Proceedings
    • 2023 – “Sustainability in the DH”
      • Conference Proceedings
    • 2022 – “Infrastructures”
      • Titles and Abstracts
    • 2021 – The Digital Orientalist’s Virtual Conference
      • Titles
    • 2020 – “Digital Orientalisms 2020”
    • 2019 – “Digital Orientalisms 2019”
  • Feedback and Inquiries
  • Donate
  • Search

Social Navigation

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Bluesky
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

Author: Lu Wang

Lu Wang is a Ph.D. candidate affiliated with the Department of History at Western University, Canada. Her dissertation studies Chinese embroidery in the late Qing and Republican period. She is interested in incorporating digital research methods, particularly text analysis, into Chinese studies.
Data Cleaning Chinese Text with OpenRefine: Punctuation Removal
Chinese Language, Online Resources, Sinology, Textual Analysis, Workflow

Data Cleaning Chinese Text with OpenRefine: Punctuation Removal

So you have heard about some cool text analysis tools that identify word frequencies, generate word clouds, and look for … Continue reading Data Cleaning Chinese Text with OpenRefine: Punctuation Removal

Posts navigation

Newer posts
Powered by WordPress.com.
The Digital Orientalist | ISSN: 2772-8374

Contact: digitalorientalist@gmail.com

Loading Comments...