Global Digital Humanities Symposium
March 21-22, 2019
Michigan State University (USA)
East Lansing, Michigan
msuglobaldh.org
#msuglobaldh
Join in virtually! The event will be livestreamed at http://go.cal.msu.edu/globaldh
(all times are in the Eastern time zone)
Thursday, March 21, 2019
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9:30-10:30 – Voices from Native Land and Challenges of Incorporating Land and Ecological Knowledge Into Digital Media – Victor Temprano and Samantha Martin-Ferris
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10:50-12:00- Lightning Talks
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10:50-11:15 – Mapping
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Mapping the Librotraficante Movement – Melanie Walsh
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All the World’s Onstage: Representing Culture through the Touring Dances of Denishawn – Harmony Bench
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Visualizing St. Petersburg: the Mapping Project about the Hidden Connections between its Famous Citizens – Antonina Puchkovskaia
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11:30-11:50 – Community Archiving
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Diné Peoples in 3D: A Collaborative Portal Project to Decolonize Keystone View Company Stereographs – Laura Smith and Megan Kudzia
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Digital Diasporas, Digital Histories: Preserving Ghana’s Past in the Digital Age – Kirstie A. Kwarteng
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1:00-2:20 – Re-Imagining Networks in Global and Local Contexts: Labor, Infrastructure, Access
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Digital Humanities and the Archival Turn in India – Puthiya Purayil Sneha
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“Digital Thick Description”: Feasts, Gifts, and Plenitude in Mughal Biographies and Paintings from 16th and 17th century India – Jyotsna Singh and Justin Wigard
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From “Natural Agitators” to “Sheepwomen:” Women’s Representation in Sheep & Wool Digital Archives – Helen Trejo
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The Death of “Publicness”: Japanese digital frameworks and access – David Humphrey
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2:40-4:00 -Memory, Bodies, and the Digital: Data as a Humanizing Force
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Mapping the History of the Humanities and Media Labs – Urszula Pawlicka-Deger
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The Grupo De Apoyo Mutuo Digital Archive: Historical Memory and Guatemala’s Disappeared – Alex Galarza and Mariana Ramirez
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Digital Seas of Memory: The Confluence of Digitality and Orality in Reconceiving the Archive – Maria Karaan and Benedict Salazar Olgado
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Enslaved: Finding People – Dean Rehberger and Walter Hawthorne
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4:20-5:40 – Digital and Other Uprisings: Margins, Centers, and Social Change
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Pedagogies of the Digitally Oppressed: Anti-Colonial Critiques and Transnational Collaborations within #OurDhIs Organizing – Kush Patel, Ashley Caranto Morford, and Arun Jacob
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A Living Archive: Centering the Content-Creator in Feminista Community Archiving – Marísa Hicks-Alcaraz
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Cyber Activism in India: Representation and Analysis of Big Data – Nanditha Narayanamoorthy
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Digital Graffiti: Website Defacement as Political Messaging and as Art – David Gustavsen
Friday, March 22, 2019
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9:30-10:30 – Responding to the “Border Crisis”: Digital Interventions and Transnational Partnerships – Maira E. Álvarez and Sylvia Fernández
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10:50-12:00- Lightning Talks
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10:50-11:15 – Textual Analysis
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Letters on/from Captivity: An Analysis of the Captive in Portuguese and Spanish Epistolary Writings in the 16th-18th Centuries – Leila Vieira
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Authorship Attribution of Yasunari Kawabata’s Novel Snow Country – Hao Sun and Mingzhe Jin
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11:30-11:50 – Networks of Knowledge
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Silent No More: Using Text Mining and Social Networks to Decolonize the History of Algerian Women – Ashley Sanders Garcia
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The Role of Digital Space in the 21st Century – Frolence Rutechura
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Humanities Scholars and Ethical Compliance in the Digital World: Role of Academic Librarians in Nigeria – Airen Adetimirin
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1:40-3:10 – En-Compassing Latitudes: Methodologies, Pedagogies, and Trajectories of Global DH – Anne Cong-Huyen, Viola Lasmana, and Kush Patel
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3:30-5:00 – Surveillance and Social Justice – Latoya Lee, Arun Jacob, Megan Wilson, Andy Boyles Petersen, and Christina Boyles
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 | @kmapesy
she/her/hers