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  1. How We Read: Close, Hyper, Machine

    Article abstract required.

    Guest lecture at Duquesne University.

    Scott Rettberg - 21.03.2011 - 23:40

  2. The Electronic Literature Directory

    The Electronic Literature Directory

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 24.06.2011 - 12:33

  3. On Reading 300 Works of Electronic Literature: Preliminary Reflections

    Note: Tabbi's essay was posted on July 22, 2009, on the online forum On the Human, hosted by the National Humanities Center where it generated 35 additional posts. It was reprinted, along edited versions of these responses, in Beyond the Screen: Transformations of Literary Structures, Interfaces and Genres (Transcript, 2010). These responses are archived separtedly in the ELMCIP Knowledge Base As "Responses to 'On Reading 300 Works of Electronic Literature: Preliminary Reflections.'"

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 31.08.2011 - 15:55

  4. Debates in the Digital Humanities

    Debates in the Digital Humanities

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 04.05.2012 - 10:05

  5. Electronic Literature: Linking Database Projects

    Electronic Literature: Linking Database Projects

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 19.06.2012 - 15:15

  6. Documenting Your Work: A Workshop on Using the ELMCIP Knowledge Base for Authors, Critics, and Teachers of Electronic Literature

    The ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base (http://elmcip.net/knowledgebase) is an open-access research database for documenting information about authors, works of electronic literature, critical writing that references those works, publishers, organizations, events, and teaching resources about e-lit. We propose a hands-on workshop session, ideally two hours in length, to be held in a computer lab with a networked computer available for each participant. The workshop will include a presentation of how authors, scholars, and teachers can use the Knowledge Base for professional purposes, to bring readers to their work, to support their research, and to develop their courses. Contributor accounts will be created for all workshop attendees, and the bulk of the session will be devoted to documenting participant’s work in the Knowledge Base itself, actively creating new records. We will focus in particular on documenting works and papers which have been presented at the ELO conferences.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 19.06.2012 - 15:23

  7. Friending The Humanities Knowledge Base: Exploring Bibliography as Social Network in Rose

    WHITE PAPER FOR THE NEH OFFICE OF DIGITAL HUMANITIES:
    ROSE DIGITAL HUMANITIES START-UP GRANT (LEVEL 2) HD-51433-11
    (9/1/2011 TO 9/30/2012)

    Alan Liu, Rama Hoetzlein, Rita Raley, Ivana Anjelkovic, Salman Bakht, Joshua Dickinson, Michael Hetrick, Andrew Kalaidjian, Eric Nebeker, Dana Solomon, and Lindsay Thomas

    Scott Rettberg - 09.01.2013 - 01:05

  8. Digital Humanties in Praxis: Introducing the Brazilian Electronic Reseach Collection

    The Digital Humanities are in. The trendy scholarly practice for the tech-savvy literati, the DH has generated manifestos, grievances, enthusiasm, grammatical controversy (plural or singular concord?), and conferences. Said to possess both a “dark side” and a utopian core, it is humanities plus media. Humanities in media – but have the humanities ever existed outside a medium of inscription?

    Stig Andreassen - 26.09.2013 - 12:45

  9. Humanidades e Informática: O Estado da Arte

    Vistas sob um certo prisma, humanidades e informática parecem dois pólos de realidades não só opostas como inconciliáveis. Porém, contrariando esse cenário de separação irremediável, defendemos aqui que algumas das oportunidades para repensar as humanidades têm sido proporcionadas precisamente pelo advento da informática. Acreditamos, por isso, que as humanidades se desenvolverão ainda mais no suporte digital e que este se tornará numa superfície de escrita e de leitura a encarar com uma normalidade que talvez ainda não seja possível esperar no actual momento histórico. Neste cenário, o computador poderá tornar-se, afinal, um “factor de união” entre “duas culturas” tradicionalmente separadas.

    (Fonte: Resumo do Autor)

    Alvaro Seica - 03.12.2013 - 15:15

  10. The Letters of 1916: Editing as UnRemembering

    Ireland is currently in the opening years of what has been billed The Decade of Centenaries, or The Decade of Commemoration. This decade, from 1912-1922, marks a violent and disruptive period, politically, socially, and creatively, cumulating in Irish independence from the United Kingdom, followed by a bloody Civil War. 1916 is seen as a turning point in Irish politics: not only were many thousands of Irish fighting in the Great War with the British army, many at home took up arms against that army during the Easter Rising. The Letters of 1916 is a crowd-sourced digital humanities project that is creating ‘a year in the life’ of Ireland, as well as how Ireland was perceived abroad, by collecting letters – any letter—about Ireland. This talk will explore the methods and politics of creating such as collection which is being positioned technically at the intersections of digital scholarly editing and big data.

    (Source: ELD 2015)

    + info: http://dh.tcd.ie/letters1916/

    Alvaro Seica - 15.05.2015 - 13:54

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