Dear colleagues,
This Thursday and Friday, we are proud to put on the fifth annual Global Digital Humanities Symposiumhttp://www.msuglobaldh.org/, bringing together presenters from around the world, and which has shifted to an all-virtual event this year. Pre-registered attendees have been sent Zoom information, but the Symposium will be livestreamed on Youtube (go.cal.msu.edu/globaldhhttp://go.cal.msu.edu/globaldh), and all are welcome to tune in. Feel free to send the livestream information along to your students as well. The programhttp://www.msuglobaldh.org/program/ and technology planhttp://www.msuglobaldh.org/technology/ are available on the website, and we encourage engagement on Twitter at #MSUGlobalDH.
Global Digital Humanities Symposium March 26-27, 2020 msuglobaldh.org #MSUGlobalDH
Program All times listed below are in eastern daylight time (EDT). Here is a tool to convert to your local timehttps://www.thetimezoneconverter.com/.
* Thursday, March 26
* 9:30 am – 10:45 am Opening Remarks and Keynote Presentation, Miguel Escobar Varela, Emic interfaces: UX design for cultural specificity * 10:45 am – 11:00 am Break * 11:00 am – 12:30 pm Lightning Talks * First section (11:00-11:35 am) * Between Phallus and Freedom: An Ethnography on the Embodied Experiences of Tinder Users in Cape Town, Leah Junck * Digital Mapping of Culpability and the Culpable in African War Texts, Richard Ajah * Building an Inclusive Digital Local History in the Midwest, Benjamin Ostermeier * Regularization of Kinship Relations to Enrich the Social Networks, Bin Li * Time for questions (11:35-11:50) * Second section (11:50-12:15) * DH and Cultural Heritage: Digitisation of Eyo Festival in Nigeria, Felix Bayode Oke * Digital Apprehensions of Indian Poetics, Zahra Rizvi, Asra Mamnoon, A. Sean Pue * Empowered Minorities: Language Rights and Differential Outcomes For Minorities Enjoying Kremlin Support, Martha Olcott, Michael Downs, and Brigid McBride * Time for questions (12:15-12:30) * 12:30 pm – 1:30 pm Lunch break * 1:30 pm – 2:45 pm Challenging Communication Technologies: Current World Events and Trends * Can Library Metadata Stand with Hong Kong?, Joshua Barton, Mike Erickson, Lucas Mak, and Nicole Smeltekop * Digitalising political communication in West Africa: Facebook and Twitter in election campaigns and political practices in Ghana, Akwasi Bosompem Boateng * Intersection: Digital Humanities, Research Data Management and Libraries in African Higher Education Institutions, Thembelihle Hwalima * 2:45 pm –3:00 pm Break * 3:00 pm –4:15 pm Moving Parts: Social Change, Categories, and the Intersections of Pedagogy and Research * Teaching with Data in the Academic Museum, Beth Fischer * Digital Humanities and the discursive complexities of colonial ‘letterature,’ Ayodele James Akinola * Map-Based Storytelling for Evolving Places, Sayan Bhattacharyya
* Friday, March 27
* 10:00 am – 11:00 am Keynote Presentation, Carrie Heitman, Narrative and Nomenclature: Research Dialogues on Place-Based Knowledge in the Age of Digital Distance * 11:00 am – 11:15 am Break * 11:15 am – 12:00 pm Poster Session (now Lightning Talks) * Visualizing Poetic Meter in South Asian Languages, A. Sean Pue, Ahmad Atta, and Rajiv Ranjan * Echoes of Handicraft: The Use of Digital Technologies in Preserving and Representing Textiles from East Asian Ethnic Minority Groups, Xiaolin Sun and Catherine Nichols * Humanities Commons: Making the Digital World Open, Communicative, and Personal, June Oh * OCTRA: A Transcription tool for the Bavarian Archive for Speech Signals (BAS), supported by CLARIN, the European Research Infrastructure for Language Resources and Technology – Emmanuel Ngue Um * 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm Lunch break * 1:00 pm – 2:15 pm The Future of the Archive: Case Studies in Power, Data, and Collaboration * The Evolution of the Enslaved Project, Kylene Cave and Duncan Tarr * Sites of Memory: Reflecting on the 1994 Genocide Against the Tutsi in Rwanda, Erik Ponder * When Managing a digital archive becomes a be-or-not-to-be issue, Emmanuel Ngue Um * 2:15 pm – 2:30 pm Break * 2:30 pm – 4:00 pm Collaboration, Cultural Knowledge, and Community as DH Learning for the 21st Century * Collaborative Pedagogy: Foreign Language and Literature Courses, Data Science, and Global Digital Humanities, Katherine Walden, Jarren Santos, Celeste Sharpe, Palmar Alvarez-Blanco, Sarah Calhoun, and Mirzam Pérez * Students as Knowledge Producers: Understanding Arab-Americans in central Ohio through Oral History Narratives, Hanada Al-Masri, Cheryl Johnson, Olivia Reynolds and Alexis Grimm * 4:00 pm – 4:15 pm Closing remarks, Christopher P. Long (Dean, College of Arts and Letters) * 4:15 pm – 4:45 pm Social time (not livestreamed)
The Global Digital Humanities Symposium is sponsored by 20 units from around Michigan State University's campus, including the College of Arts & Letters; Department of English; Department of Writing, Rhetoric, and American Cultures; Department of Theatre; Experience Architecture Program; Department of Linguistics and German, Slavic, Asian, and African Languages; Department of Romance and Classical Studies; Muslim Studies Program; Global Studies in the Arts and Humanities; Graduate School; Canadian Studies Center; Hub for Innovation and Learning Technology; Department of History; Matrix; H-Net; Asian Studies Center; MSU Libraries; African Studies Center; Department of Anthropology; and Center for Gender in Global Context.
Thanks, Kristen
Kristen Mapes Assistant Director of Digital Humanities, College of Arts & Letters Michigan State University 479 West Circle Drive, Linton Hall 308 East Lansing MI 48824 517-884-1712 kmapes@msu.edu