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  1. Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Autumn 2016)

    Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Autumn 2016)

    Alvaro Seica - 01.06.2016 - 11:43

  2. Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Fall 2017)

    Digital Humanities in Practice (DIKULT 207, Fall 2017)

    Alvaro Seica - 24.08.2017 - 11:52

  3. The Future of the Digital Humanities at the University of Bergen

    A panel debate / discussion of the future of Digital Humanities at the Universtiy of Bergen, moderated by Jill Walker Rettberg, including Mylonas, UiB Humanities Dean Jørgen Sejersted, UiB Library Director Maria-Carme Torras Calvo, Infomedia Professor 2 Anders Fagerjord, and Digital Culture Professor and ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base project leader Scott Rettberg.

    The debate followed a presentation by Elli Mylonas on Digital Humanities centers in university libraries. The panel discussion begins at 32:30 in the video documentation.

    Scott Rettberg - 01.05.2018 - 14:08

  4. Rewriting, Relearning : Creative Collaborations in the Digital Humanities

    Eight scholars joined an experimental writing workshop in the mid 2000s, in the hope of transforming their work and its impact—and developed some of the first projects to be published in the groundbreaking digital humanities journal Vectors. In this musical, performative documentary, your keypresses trigger statements and media from alumni of the Vectors workshop as they retrace their experiences, which for many had a significant effect on how they thought and wrote. Delivered using a new technology called Stepworks, every word, image, sound, video, and musical note in the documentary was individually specified using Google Sheets. The work is presented in two parts, which can be navigated
    using the menu in the top right.

    Jane Lausten - 26.09.2018 - 15:20

  5. A World of Fiction : Digital Collections and the Future of Literary History

    Mass-digitised collections are an increasingly important part of knowledge infrastructure for literary history and the humanities generally. This book explores the requirements and possibilities of research in this context. In investigating over 9,200 works of extended fiction identified in the largest open-access collection of mass-digitised historical newspapers internationally, it shows how data-rich approaches to literary history can revolutionise our understanding of literature in the past, including the categories and conceptual frameworks through which we perceive it.

    (Source: https://katherinebode.wordpress.com/books/)

    Hannah Ackermans - 07.08.2019 - 10:44

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