Digital Humanities Expert to Speak at UC Libraries

The UC Libraries Digital Humanities Speaker series continues Feb. 29 and March 1 with visiting scholar Élika Ortega, a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Digital Research in the Humanities at the University of Kansas.

Ortega will present a series of talks and hands-on workshops, all free and open to the public, in the Walter C. Langsam Library. Participants are encouraged to come to any or all sessions that are of interest to them and to their work.

Monday, February 29

  • Keynote: 10-12:30 p.m. – Come One, Come All! Teaching Digital Humanities from the Library, Langsam Library 462
  • Lunch (all welcome) – 12:30-1:30 p.m., Langsam Library 480
  • Session 2: 1:30-3:00 p.m. – Each Thing was Infinite Things: The Potential of Digital Humanities Microprojects to Build Skills and Teams, Langsam Library 462

Tuesday, March 1

  • Session 3: 9:30-11:00 am. – The Myth of Print-Digital Supersession and the Case of Print Electronic Literature, Langsam Library 480

Previously, Ortega was highly involved in the CulturePlex Lab at the University of Western Ontario. She is currently very active in several international digital humanities groups and initiatives. At the University of Kansas, she developed and now teaches an introduction to digital humanities course. Visit

http://elikaortega.net/cv/

for more information.

The development and implementation of the speaker series is part of UC Libraries’

Digital Humanities/Digital Scholarship Strategic Initiative

, which aims to build engagement and awareness of digital humanities and digital scholarship within UC Libraries and the university. More about the Libraries’ Strategic Plan can be found online at

http://www.libraries.uc.edu/about/strategic-plan.html

.

For more information, contact Arlene Johnson, associate senior librarian and digital humanities strategist, at (513) 556-1417 or via e-mail

arlene.johnson@uc.edu

.

Related Stories

1

Engineering student works to create safer ground transportation

April 15, 2024

Ground transportation has a substantial impact on the daily lives of humans. Sai Bonthu, a doctoral candidate of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Cincinnati, is working to develop a product that has the potential to accurately reduce traffic accidents. Currently, he is working on a grant with the Ohio Department of Transportation and was named Graduate Student Engineer of the Month by the College of Engineering and Applied Science.

2

The next generation of care

April 15, 2024

University of Cincinnati student-led nonprofit organization Parkinson's Together takes a multidisciplinary approach to meeting the needs of patients with Parkinson's disease in their community. Now it's setting a model for student organizations across the country.

3

UC engineering co-op medalist excels through 6 co-op experiences

April 15, 2024

Ever since she garnered an appreciation for chemistry in high school, fifth-year University of Cincinnati student Jaclyn Bashore has not looked back. When she graduates with a chemical engineering degree and a minor in chemistry this spring, Bashore will have had six co-op experiences — along with a new full-time job at AbbVie, a biopharmaceutical research company with whom she did two co-op rotations. To commemorate her exceptional co-op work, the UC College of Engineering and Applied Science awarded Bashore the 2024 Herman Schneider Medal, an annual award given to a graduating senior who demonstrates outstanding success as a co-op student.

Debug Query for this