Today, Oct. 2, 2015, the Franklin Humanities Institute, the Wired! Lab, the PhD Lab in Digital Knowledge, and HASTAC@Duke will be presenting “Conversations in the Digital Humanities,” the inaugural event of the new Digital Humanities Initiative at Duke University. More information about the event, in which I will be participating alongside colleagues from the S-1: Speculative Sensation Lab, can be found on the FHI website.
Also, all of the 10-minute “lightning talks” will be live-streamed. The first block of sessions, from 2:15-3:45pm EST, will be streamed here, and the second block, from 4:00-5:40pm, will be viewable here. (Apparently, the videos will be archived and available after the fact as well.)
Here is the complete schedule:
2:00 – 2:15
Welcome and Introduction to Digital Humanities Initiative2:15 – 3:45
Session 1 (10 minutes per talk)
- Project Vox (Andrew Janiak, and Liz Milewicz)
- NC Jukebox (Trudi Abel, Victoria Szabo)
- Visualizing Cultures: The Shiseido Project (Gennifer Weisenfeld)
- Going Global in Mughal India (Sumathi Ramaswamy)
- Israel’s Occupation in the Digital Age (Rebecca Stein)
- Digital Athens: Archaeology meets ArcGIS (Tim Shea, Sheila Dillon)
- Early Medieval Networks (J. Clare Woods)
3:45 – 4:00
Coffee Break4:00 – 5:40
Session 2 (10 minutes per talk)
- Painting the Apostles – A Case Study in “The Lives of Things” (Mark Olson, Mariano Tepper, and Caroline Bruzelius)
- Digital Archaeology: From the Field to Virtual Reality (Maurizio Forte)
- The Memory Project (Luo Zhou)
- Veoveo, children at play (Raquel Salvatella de Prada)
- “Things to Think With”: Weird DH, Data, and Experimental Media Theory (S-1 Lab)
- s_traits, Generative Authorship and the Emergence Lab (Bill Seaman and John Supko)
- Found Objects and Fireflies (Scott Lindroth)
- Project Provoke (Mary Caton Lingold and others)
5:40 – 6:00
Reception