Klein studied comparative literature and computer science at Harvard University.[5] Before returning to graduate school, she worked as a software developer and bike messenger.[6] She received her Ph.D. in English and American Studies from the Graduate Center, CUNY in 2011.[7]
Career and research
Klein joined the School of Literature, Media, and Communication at the Georgia Institute of Technology as an assistant professor, where she taught in the Computational Media program. She also founded the Digital Humanities Lab there. Her lab’s work on the Shape of History project brought new attention to the forgotten data visualization scheme created by Elizabeth Palmer Peabody in the nineteenth century.[8] In 2017, she was named one of the "rising stars of digital humanities" by Inside Higher Ed.[9]
Klein’s research, which combines quantitative methods and archival research, proposes a way to "integrate race, gender, and postcolonial theory with computer learning to develop methodologies for performing research in bias-laden archives."[10] She is the author of An Archive of Taste: Race and Eating in the Early United States, which was published by the University of Minnesota Press.[11] She is the co-author, with Catherine D’Ignazio, of Data Feminism, which was published by MIT Press. Data Feminism was named a "must-read" book by WIRED Magazine and a 2021 PROSE Award finalist.[12][2][13] Klein is also co-editor, with Matthew K. Gold, of the Debates in the Digital Humanities book series, a "digital humanities bellwether" which offers a "hybrid model for open-access texts to be published in both experimental online spaces and traditional print forms."[14]
In 2019, Klein joined Emory University as an associate professor of English and Quantitative Theory and Methods.[15]
Klein, Lauren F. (12 May 2020). "An Archive of Taste: Race and Eating in the Early United States". University of Minnesota Press. doi:10.5749/j.ctv10vkzpd.