Event
Text as the Next Frontier: Text Mining, NLP, and the Future of the Humanities / The tenth Lecture on Digital Humanities
"The Lectures on Digital Humanities" take place twice a semester and focus on linguistics cognitive practices, literary studies, media studies, and information studies in the Digital Era.
Jessie Labov - Director of Academic and Institutional Development at McDaniel College Budapest, and a Resident Fellow in the Center for Media, Data and Society at Central European University. Before coming to Budapest she was an Associate Professor in the Department of Slavic and East European Languages and Cultures at Ohio State University. Her book Transatlantic Central Europe: Contesting Geography and Redefining Culture Beyond the Nation (2019), on the relationship between émigré publishing and regional identity, was recently published by CEU Press. Her work in the digital humanities has included projects on canon formation, text mining, and visualizing the receptive pathways of literary journals (Reading Kultura From a Distance, 2015). Labov is currently working on a network analysis of the Radio Free Europe telex communication between 1954 and 1974, and vice-chair of the COST Action NEP4Dissent.
Information
See also
Cultural dissent in Central and Eastern Europe
The spring online lecture series of the Forum in Literary Studies at the Institute of Czech Literature of the CAS will offer insight into current research topics of cultural dissent before 1989 in Central and Eastern Europe, especially issues of gender, alternative culture, mediality, transnationality and leftist thinking.
Ewaluacja / otwarte seminarium Centrum Humanistyki Cyfrowej (online)
Spotkanie odbędzie się za pośrednictwem platformy ZOOM. (Link do wydarzenia jest **tutaj**).
Digital Humanities 2020
The theme of the conference is “carrefours/intersections,” a place where paths cross. The theme recalls the geographical and cultural heritage of Ottawa, a bilingual city in unceded Algonquin territory. Three specific sub-disciplinary interests will guide our use of the theme: First Nations, Native American, and Indigenous Studies; public digital humanities; and the open data movement.
DHOx2020 ONLINE EVENT: Registration now open
Due to COVID-19, sadly the Digital Humanities Oxford Summer School cannot run in its usual format this year. Instead we are pleased to offer an online event, DHOx2020, from 13-15 July, which will run on Zoom. The online event is open to all, with a small registration fee to cover running costs.