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  1. Jonathan Harris

    Jonathan Harris makes projects that reimagine how humans relate to technology and to each other. Combining elements of computer science, anthropology, visual art and storytelling, his projects range from building the world’s largest time capsule (with Yahoo!) to documenting an Alaskan Eskimo whale hunt on the Arctic Ocean (with a warm hat). He is the co-creator of We Feel Fine, which continuously measures the emotional temperature of the human world through large-scale blog analysis, and has made other projects about online dating, modern mythology, anonymity, news, and language.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.11.2011 - 09:18

  2. Brian Greenspan

    Brian Greenspan is an Associate Professor in the Department of English and the doctoral program in Cultural Mediations at Carleton University. He is the designer and founding director of the Hypertext and Hypermedia Lab, and co-designer of the StoryTrek locative authoring and reading system. His research interests include utopian narratives, digital cultures, and the intersections between them.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 22.11.2011 - 15:59

  3. Elisabet Takehana

    Dr. Elisabet Takehana is an Assistant Professor in the Arts and Communications department of LIM College. Her scholarly interests include aesthetics, digital studies, and 20th century text and image production. Her essay "Legitimizing the Artist: Avant-Garde Utopianism and Relational Aesthetics" was recently published in Shift and "Browsing the Data Narrative: Affective Association and Visualization" appeared in the International Digital Media Arts Association Journal. Her forthcoming essay "Burroughs/Rauschenberg: Image-Text / Text-Image" will be published in The Future of Text and Image (Cambridge Scholars).

    Patricia Tomaszek - 22.11.2011 - 16:04

  4. 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

  5. Zoe Beloff

    Zoe Beloff grew up in Edinburgh, Scotland. In 1980 she moved to New York to study at Columbia University where she received an MFA in Film. Her work has been featured in international exhibitions and screenings; venues include the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Freud Dream Museum in St. Petersburg, and the Pompidou Center in Paris. In 2009 she participated in the Athens Biennale, and has an upcoming project with MuHKA Museum in Antwerp. Her most recently completed work is the exhibition “The Coney Island Amateur Psychoanalytic Society and their Circle. She has been working with the Christine Burgin Gallery on a number of artist projects that include books and prints. Zoe works with a wide range of media including film, stereoscopic projection performance, interactive media, installation and drawing.Her artistic interest lies in finding ways to graphically manifest the unconscious processes of the mind. She considers herself a medium, an interface between the living and the dead, the real and the imaginary. Sometimes she uses archaic apparatuses, sometimes, new analog/digital hybrids.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 05.12.2011 - 07:54

  6. Mirona Magearu

    Completed her PhD at University of Maryland in 2011.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 05.12.2011 - 13:19

  7. Taras Mashtalir

    ™ (Taras Mashtalir) is a composer and sound designer, a classical musician turned electronic music producer. His compositions are unique blend of different genres morphed together and wrapped into a new aesthetic fabric of electronic ambience. After receiving BA in Linguistics & Cross-cultural communication from Pyatigorsk State Linguistic University, Taras spent some time recording/performing in St. Petersburg and Moscow, before relocating to New York. For the past 12 years Taras achieved outstanding results and his work is acknowledged in the industry. He produced numbers of albums, collaborating with major artists such as: Patrick Leonard, legendary composer and producer (Pink Floyd, Elton John, Madonna) Lou Christie is an American singer-songwriter best known for pop hits in the 1960s. Dmitri Strizhov is a Russian-born painter and poet. The works of ™ also include multimedia installations, soundtracks for the films and animations, as well as music for TV ads and programs like Discovery Science Channel, History Channel, Speed Channel, TNT, FOX Sports, CBS etc. Taras is currently involved in several projects exploring new dimensions of digital publishing.

    Taras Mashtalir - 07.12.2011 - 23:15

  8. Ture Schwebs

    Ture Schwebs

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 14.12.2011 - 13:53

  9. 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

  10. Christy Dena

    Australian scholar and developer specialising in cross-media.

    Christine Wilks - 20.01.2012 - 16:51

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