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  1. Le Cube Centre de création numérique

    LE CUBE, A CENTRE FOR DIGITAL CREATION

    A pioneer in the French digital culture scene, Le Cube is a place of reference for digital art and creation. It’s a space open to everyone – whatever their age, whether their level of digital skills – for discovering, practicing, creating and sharing throughout the year via workshops, courses, exhibitions, shows, conferences and discussions with digital artists and experts.

    Le Cube is an initiative created in 2001 by the city of Issy-les-Moulineaux, as the Urban Community of Grand Paris Seine Ouest's centre for digital creation. It is organised and managed by the ART3000 association.

    LE CUBE’s many facets
    Le Cube is open to all and dedicated to helping people discover, create and exchange throughout the year thanks to training courses, exhibitions, shows, talks & discussions with artists and actors in the field of digital technology. 

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 13.09.2011 - 10:18

  2. New Jersey Institute of Technology, Communication and Media

    New Jersey Institute of Technology, Communication and Media

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 16.09.2011 - 20:05

  3. Kelly Writers House

    Founded in 1995 by a group of students, faculty, staff and alumni, the Kelly Writers House is an actual 13-room house at 3805 Locust Walk on Penn's campus that serves as a center for writers of all kinds from Penn and the Philadelphia region at large. Each semester the Writers House hosts approximately 150 public programs and projects--poetry readings, film screenings, seminars, web magazines, lectures, dinners, radio broadcasts, workshops, art exhibits, and musical performances--and about 500 people visit the House each week. They work, write, and collaborate in seminar rooms, a publications room, the "hub" office, a cozy living room, a dining room, a kitchen with plenty of space for conversation, and "the Arts Cafe," the wonderfully open south-facing room that was originally the parlor. Writers House also has a strong virtual presence. Our ongoing interactive webcasts give listeners from across the country the opportunity to talk with writers such as Ian Frazier, Richard Ford, and Cynthia Ozick. And via our dozens of listservs and email discussion groups, we link writers and readers from across the country and around the world.

    Scott Rettberg - 02.11.2011 - 14:19

  4. Center for Digital Storytelling

    The Center for Digital Storytelling (CDS) is an international non-profit training, project development, and research organization dedicated to assisting people in using digital media to tell meaningful stories from their lives. Our focus is on partnering with community, educational, and business institutions to develop large-scale initiatives using methods and principles adapted from our original Digital Storytelling Workshop. We also offer workshops for organizations and individuals and serve as a clearinghouse of information and resources about storytelling and new media. (Source: Organization's website)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 03.11.2011 - 12:15

  5. Brandeis University, Comparative Literature Program

    The interdisciplinary program of comparative literature engages the study of literatures and cultures within and across national boundaries. It also comprises comparative analysis of literary texts and genres with visual art forms, social discourse and practices, as well as other expressions of cultural innovation.

    These forms preexist us — we are born into a certain culture, which consists of a set of discourses and practices — and shape our intellectual awareness of culture. They are not, however, static, but dramatic in nature and continually undergo change.

    Analysis of cultural differences, diversities and similarities will promote a greater knowledge of the rapidly changing globe we inhabit and also deepen students critical understanding of their own culture.

    (Source: organization's website)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 23.11.2011 - 09:54

  6. HASTAC

    From the organization´s website: HASTAC ("haystack"), founded in 2001 at Duke University is a network of individuals and institutions inspired by the possibilities that new technologies offer us for shaping how we learn, teach, communicate, create, and organize our local and global communities.  We are motivated by the conviction that the digital era provides rich opportunities for informal and formal learning and for collaborative, networked research that extends across traditional disciplines, across the boundaries of academe and community, across the "two cultures" of humanism and technology, across the divide of thinking versus making, and across social strata and national borders.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 03.12.2011 - 19:30

  7. University of Michigan - Institute for the Humanities

    From the institute´s website:

    The Institute for the Humanities is a center for innovative, collaborative study in the humanities and arts. Each year we provide fellowships for Michigan faculty, graduate students, and visiting scholars who work on interdisciplinary projects. We also offer a wide array of public and scholarly events, including weekly brown bag talks, public lectures, conferences, art exhibits, and performances.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 03.12.2011 - 19:49

  8. The Kitchen

    from the organization´s website:

    The Kitchen is a non-profit, interdisciplinary organization that provides innovative artists working in the media, literary, and performing arts with exhibition and performance opportunities to create and present new work. Using its own extensive history as a resource, the organization identifies, supports, and presents emerging and under-recognized artists who are making significant contributions to their respective fields as well as serves as a safe space for more established artists to take unusual creative risks.

    The Kitchen has been a powerful force in shaping the cultural landscape of this country for more than three decades. Founded as an artist collective in 1971 by Woody and Steina Vasulka and incorporated as a non-profit two years later, in its infancy The Kitchen was a space where video artists and experimental composers and performers could share their ideas with like-minded colleagues. It thus was among the very first American institutions to embrace the then emergent fields of video and performance art, while also presenting new visionary work within the fields of dance, music, literature, and film.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 12.12.2011 - 20:08

  9. DHCommons

    DHCommons, an initiative of centerNet, is an online hub focused on matching digital humanities projects seeking assistance with scholars interested in project collaboration. This hub responds to a pressing and demonstrable need for a project-collaborator matching service that will allow scholars interested in DH to enter the field by joining an existing project as well as make existing projects more sustainable by drawing in new, well-matched participants. Additionally, DHCommons helps break down the siloization of an emerging field by connecting collaborators across institutions, a particularly acute need for solo practitioners and those without access to a digital humanities center.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 17.01.2012 - 10:58

  10. University of Bergen, Department of Humanistic Informatics

    Note: See University of Bergen, Program in Digital Culture.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 02.02.2012 - 14:15

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