Categories
Incentive Grants

DH Incentive Grant Recipients

The Digital Humanities Working Group would like to congratulate Joel Blecher and Jon Eastwood on being recipients of funding from the second round of Digital Humanities Incentive Grants.  Feel free to take a closer look at both of their wonderful proposals for integrating DH techniques and tools into their courses:

Blecher proposal for Fall 2014 course

Eastwood proposal for Winter 2015 course

Also check out the proposals of past Incentive Grant recipients:

Wan-Chuan Kao: HotelOrient

Hank Dobin: Representing Queen Elizabeth

Sascha Goluboff: Campus Sex in the Digital Age

Howard Pickett: Connecting the Dots- Mapping Low-Income Needs and Services in the Rockbridge Area

 

 

Categories
DH

W&L to Host International Science Conference

Washington & Lee University will host an International Meeting entitled Newton’s Apple and Other Historical Myths about Science on May 9-10, 2014.  This conference has been organized by Kostas Kampourakis (University of Geneva), Ronald L. Numbers (University of Wisconsin-Madison), and Nicolaas Rupke (Washington & Lee University).

Conference Program:  Historical_ Myths_Conference_Landscape-format

Categories
Event on campus

W&L to Host International Science Conference

Washington & Lee University will host an International Meeting entitled Newton’s Apple and Other Historical Myths about Science on May 9-10, 2014.  This conference has been organized by Kostas Kampourakis (University of Geneva), Ronald L. Numbers (University of Wisconsin-Madison), and Nicolaas Rupke (Washington & Lee University).

Conference Program:  Historical_ Myths_Conference_Landscape-format

Categories
Event off campus

Poet and Digital Author To Speak Thursday at VMI

This Thursday, March 20, dean’s speaker Amaranth Borsuk will read selections from her digital pop-up book, Between Page and Screen, and give a talk, “Material Poetics Between Page and Screen.” The presentation will take place at 7:45 p.m. in the Turman Room of Preston Library.

For further information see http://www.vmi.edu/Content.aspx?id=10737428334

Categories
Announcement

Mellon Junior Faculty Fellow in Digital History

Washington and Lee University invites applications for a Mellon Foundation postdoctoral fellowship for recent Ph.D.s in history who intend to pursue careers as teacher-scholars in a liberal arts college setting.  These two-year fellowships are open to candidates who earned their Ph.D.s in Spring 2012 or later.  Fellows will play an active role in helping to demonstrate innovative methods of teaching, making interdisciplinary connections and teaching new courses in neglected areas of the curriculum. Fellows will have a reduced teaching load to allow time for their own scholarly development.

The Department of History seeks a specialist in digital history with a concentration in ancient or any field in pre-1800 global or non-Western history.  Applicants should have experience with digital humanities pedagogies and using digital humanities tools in their scholarly research.

Apply electronically at our portal: https://jobs.wlu.edu/postings/1907. After filling out a cover sheet, you will be prompted to upload a letter of application, a CV, a sample of recent scholarly work, and enter contact information for two providers of letters of recommendation (or a credentials file).  Review of applications will begin April 7, 2014.  Address your application letter (and any questions) to Professor Sarah Horowitz (horowitzs@wlu.edu), Chair, Mellon Junior Faculty Fellow in Digital History Search Committee, Department of History, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, VA 24450.  Washington and Lee and the Department of History are interested in candidates committed to high standards of scholarship and professional activities, and to the development of a campus climate that supports equality and diversity among its faculty, staff, and students.  The University is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

Categories
Announcement

Mellon Foundation Awards Davidson $800,000 To Expand Digital Studies

read the full article at http://www.davidson.edu/news/news-stories/131213-mellon-foundation-digital-studies-award

Categories
DH

American Historical Association blog entries about digital pedagogy

Check out this discussion about digital pedagogy: http://historyinthecity.blogspot.com/2014/01/doing-digital-history-with-undergrads.html

Categories
Publication

Professor Sarah Horowitz publishes book dealing with Post-Revolutionary France

Professor of History, Sarah Horowitz, recently published a book through Penn State University Press.  The following description and more information is available on their blog at http://www.psupress.org/books/titles/978-0-271-06192-4.html

In Friendship and Politics in Post-Revolutionary France, Sarah Horowitz brings together the political and cultural history of post-revolutionary France to illuminate how French society responded to and recovered from the upheaval of the French Revolution. The Revolution led to a heightened sense of distrust and divided the nation along ideological lines. In the wake of the Terror, many began to express concerns about the atomization of French society. Friendship, though, was regarded as one bond that could restore trust and cohesion. Friends relied on each other to serve as confidants; men and women described friendship as a site of both pleasure and connection. Because trust and cohesion were necessary to the functioning of post-revolutionary parliamentary life, politicians turned to friends and ideas about friendship to create this solidarity. Relying on detailed analyses of politicians’ social networks, new tools arising from the digital humanities, and examinations of behind-the-scenes political transactions, Horowitz makes clear the connection between politics and emotions in the early nineteenth century, and she reevaluates the role of women in political life by showing the ways in which the personal was the political in the post-revolutionary era.

Categories
Event off campus

NEH – special Google+ Hangout event

Join the National Endowment for the Humanities on a special Google+ Hangout on Wednesday, December 11th, 2013 at 2pm ET—watch live from humanitiesinsights.wordpress.com. 

Watch live (here) as Ira Flatow, host of NPR’s Science Friday, interviews University of Richmond President Dr. Edward L. Ayers and his colleagues in the University of Richmond’s Digital Scholarship Lab, Dr. Robert K. Nelson and Dr. Scott Nesbit. The Digital Scholarship Lab (DSL) develops innovative digital humanities projects that contribute to research and teaching at and beyond the University of Richmond. It seeks to reach a wide audience by developing projects that integrate thoughtful interpretation in the humanities and social sciences with innovations in new media. Explore DSL projects here, including the NEH-funded website, Visualizing Emancipation.Live tweet with #DigHum.

 

Categories
DH

Digital Humanities at the Winter Academy 2013

Through the Dean’s call for cohorts, we are able to offer a fantastic digital humanities program on Wednesday, December 11 during Winter Faculty Academy.  It will be held in the IQ Center, Science Addition 202A.

Digital Humanities 101:  DH in the Classroom

  • 9:00-9:30 Breakfast and Informal Discussions
  • 9:30- 9:45 The Importance of DH at W&L (Paul Youngman)
  • 9:45-10:45 Morning Keynote: “Digital Pedagogy in the Humanities: Models, Keywords, and Prototypes,” Rebecca Frost Davis
  • 10:45-11:00 Break
  • 11:00 – 11:45 Digital Humanities Tools of the Trade #1: WordPress (Bucy)
  • 12:30-1:45 Lunch Speaker:  “Blake, Biofuel, and Bribery: Interdisciplinary Applications of Computing,” Valerie Barr, Union College, NSF
  • 2:15 – 3:15 Digital Humanities Tools of the Trade #2: Voyant (Mickel), MApplication (Keen, Benefiel)

You can sign up for this event at https://managementtools2.wlu.edu/EventManager/pages/Page1.aspx?EventID=57