What a great idea, Quinn. Consider this copied!
[U of Lethbridge Logo]
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Professor
President, Force11http://force11.org
Chief Spokesperson (Bargaining), University of Lethbridge Faculty Associationhttp://ulfa.ca
Editor, Digital Studies/Le champ numhttp://digitalstudies.org/érique http://digitalstudies.org/
Department of Englishhttp://www.uleth.ca/artsci/english and University Library (Centre for the Study of Scholarly Communicationhttp://www.uleth.ca/research/centres-institutes/centre-study-scholarly-communication)
University of Lethbridgehttp://uleth.ca/
4401 University Drive West
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Canada
Tel. +1 (403) 329-2377
http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell
@danielPaulODhttps://twitter.com/DanielPaulOD
________________________________ From: globaloutlookdh-l globaloutlookdh-l-bounces@uleth.ca on behalf of Quinn Dombrowski qad@stanford.edu Sent: March 13, 2019 0:16 To: globaloutlookdh-l, MailList Subject: [globaloutlookDH-l] Virtual poster session for multilingual DH course
Dear colleagues,
The students of Stanford University’s “Digital Humanities Across Borders” DLCL 204 course invite you to join them for a virtual poster session of their final projects. This quarter, the students have been applying a variety of digital humanities tools and methods to texts in a non-English language of their choice (including Spanish, Portuguese, German, Italian, Russian, Chinese, and Japanese).
Final posters are up at this URL: https://digitalhumanities.stanford.edu/dlcl204 Shorter write-ups and other materials may trickle in over the next couple days. Each project has its own hashtag along with the course hashtag. Students will be reading and responding to questions and comments on Thursday, March 14th from 1:30-2:50 PM Pacific Time.
If you have a moment, please take a look at the projects and send along any thoughts or questions. Materials for this course (including tutorials and code) will be finalized and posted over the next week or so at https://github.com/quinnanya/dlcl204.
Many thanks, Quinn Dombrowski, on behalf of the “Digital Humanities Across Borders” class.