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  1. Digital Scholarly Communication

    HASTAC´s conference on Digital Scholarly Communication showed why and how we cannot change the academic message without transforming the medium. And vice versa. The gathering experimented with an array of new forms and formats designed not just to discuss those three terms--digital, scholarly, communication--but to show how they work together to change one another and, indeed, to contribute to the transformation of higher education more generally. Bringing together voices from many sectors of the academy in a variety of new formats, this conference presages powerful new possibilities for interdisciplinary, interactive, and multimedia research and communication both in the academy and for the general public.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 03.12.2011 - 19:21

  2. Getting Started in the Digital Humanities with DHCommons

    Digital methodologies and new media are changing the landscape of research and teaching in modern languages and literatures. Scholars can now computationally analyze entire corpora of texts or preserve and share materials through digital archives. Students can engage in authentic applied research linking text to place, or study Shakespeare in a virtual Globe Theater. In the face of all the digital humanities buzz--from the MLA to the New York Times to Twitter--where can scholars interested in the field turn to get started? This three-hour preconvention workshop welcomes language and literature scholars who wish to learn about, start, or join digital scholarly projects for research and/or teaching. Representatives of major digital humanities projects and initiatives will share their expertise on project design, available resources and opportunities, lead small-group training sessions on technologies and skills to help participants get started, and be available for follow-up one-on-one consultations later in the day.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.01.2012 - 11:06

  3. What are Digital Humanities?

    Digital Humanities is a buzzword and as such, the very concept and related research approaches are subject to immensely opinionated discussions both in printed and digital media, inside as well as outside of academia. But what are digital humanities? A new discipline within the ‘traditional’ or one opposed to the ‘traditional’ humanities? A mere set of methods and technologies imported from computer sciences? Or a certain way of perceiving and engaging with modern humanities research?

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.06.2013 - 13:19

  4. Digital Humanities

    The ADHO organizes and sponsors an annual conference. The first joint conference was held in 1989, at the University of Toronto--but that was the 16th annual meeting of ALLC, and the ninth annual meeting of the ACH-sponsored International Conference on Computers and the Humanities (ICCH). Since then, the conference has grown to include other organizations and it has been held (or will be held) in the following locations:

    • University of Western Sydney, Australia (2015): CFP

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 26.10.2014 - 05:26

  5. Digital Humanities 2013 (DH2013)

    Digital Humanities 2013 (DH2013)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 26.10.2014 - 05:30

  6. DRHA 2015 Digital Research in the Humanities and Arts Dublin Conference

    DRHA 2015, Digital Research in the Humanities and Arts Dublin Conference is starting on 30 August, 2015 and ending on 02 September, 2015.

    The place of the Conference was picked out as Dublin City University.

    DRHA 2015 should be an astounding Conference that will cope with the topics of Digital Humanities, Digital Arts, Digital Media and Social Sciences and alot more.

    Digital Research in the Humanities and Arts Dublin Conference is organized annually.

    (source: http://eventegg.com/drha-2015/)

    Hannah Ackermans - 05.09.2015 - 10:25

  7. Other Codes

    Welcome to the official home page of Other Codes / Cóid Eile –  Digital Literatures in Context. This two-day event is the first Galway Digital Cultures Initiative conference, and will take place at the National University of Ireland, Galway, 11-12 May 2017. The conference is hosted by the Moore Institute for Research in the Humanities and Social Studies.

    Alvaro Seica - 11.05.2017 - 11:27

  8. Documenting Born Digital Creative and Scholarly Works for Access and Preservation

    To preserve digital works three modes have traditionally been employed: migration from an older format into a newer one (e.g. CD-ROM to flash drive), emulation of guest system on a host system (e.g. system built on Apple GW-BASIC but changed to one built on C++), and collection––retaining vintage hardware and software for accessing the original formats. Curators like Christiane Paul have advocated for migration and emulation for ease of maintenance and economic reasons, but Digital Humanities scholars like Alan Liu, Nick Montfort, Noah Waldrip-Fruin and others, have highlighted the need for preserving the human experience and cultural history through collection. The problem left unsolved, however, was how to broaden collection so that 1) libraries and museums do not need to maintain the large number of required hardware and software needed for accessing digital works, and 2) audiences do not have to travel to specialized labs to experience the works. The “Pathfinders Project” sought to answer these challenges of collection with its documentation methodology.

    Ryan House - 16.06.2017 - 00:39

  9. ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base Symposium 2018

    The ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base (​http://www.elmcip.net/knowledgebase​), an open-access, contributory research database, was launched in 2010 as part of the HERA-funded ELMCIP (Electronic Literature as a Model of Creativity and Innovation in Practice: Developing a Network-Based Creative Community). During and after the ELMCIP grant period (2010-2013), the Knowledge Base grew to become the most substantial research database in the field. The database now includes more than 12,000 records documenting creative works, critical writing, authors, publishers, organizations, events, teaching resources, databases and archives in the field of electronic literature, and is used on a daily basis by researchers around the world. It is also an essential aspect of the University of Bergen Digital Culture curriculum, used in four different courses, including most significantly DIKULT 207: Digital Humanities in Practice, a course in which our students actively work on developing records and analyses of works and relationships between objects and actors in the field of electronic literature.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 27.04.2018 - 15:40

  10. CLARIN Annual Conference 2019

    The CLARIN Annual Conference is the main annual event for those working on the construction and operation of CLARIN across Europe, as well as for representatives of the communities of use in the humanities, and social sciences.

    This event is organized by CLARIN ERIC in collaboration with the University of Leipzig and InfAI - Institut für Angewandte Informatik.

    CLARIN2019 is organized for the wider Humanities and Social Sciences communities in order to exchange ideas and experiences with the CLARIN infrastructure. This includes the design, construction and operation of the CLARIN infrastructure, the data, tools and services that it contains or should contain, its actual use by researchers, its relation to other infrastructures and projects, and the CLARIN Knowledge Sharing Infrastructure.

    Scott Rettberg - 01.10.2019 - 11:47

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