Further action is required to make this featured image accessible
The below criteria must be satisfied:
- Add featured-image alt tag (in page properties OR on image metadata in the dam)
The image will not display until the issue above is resolved.
Digital Humanities Expert to Speak at March 6-7 Langsam Library Event
University of Cincinnati Libraries, in partnership with the College of Arts and Sciences, welcomes to campus visiting scholar Roopika Risam as the next expert in the Digital Humanities Speaker Series March 6-7 in Langsam Library.
Risam, an assistant professor of English at Salem State University, 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, March 6
- Keynote: 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story: The Stakes of Digital Cultural Memory, Langsam 480
- Lunch (all welcome) 12:30 to 1:30 p.m., Outside Langsam 462
- Hands-On Session (laptop recommended): 1:30 to 3 p.m. Archiving Social Justice with Omeka, Langsam 462
Tuesday, March 7
- Session 3: 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Digital Labor across Global North and South, Langsam 480
Risams research examines the intersections of postcolonial, African diaspora, and U.S. ethnic studies and the role of digital humanities in mediating between them. Her book, "Postcolonial Digital Humanities," is forthcoming with Northwestern University Press, and her co-edited volume "Intersectionality in Digital Humanities" is under contract with Arc Humanities Press. Her current book project explores digital activism engaged in decolonizing the digital cultural memory of humanity.
She is also currently co-editing a volume on the digital black Atlantic, a special issue of Digital Studies/Le Champ Numérique on global digital humanities, and a special issue of First Monday on global feminisms and digital labor. Her scholarship has recently appeared in Debates in the Digital Humanities, International Journal of e-Politics, First Monday, Ada, South Asian Review, Digital Humanities Quarterly, Left History and Digital Scholarship in the Humanities.
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 co-director of the Digital Scholarship Center, at (513) 556-1417 or via e-mail
.
Related Stories
From literature to AI: UC grad shares career path to success
April 23, 2024
Before Katie Trauth Taylor worked with international organizations like NASA, Boeing and Hershey, and before receiving accolades for her work in the generative AI space, she was in a much different industry: English and literature.
WVXU: Why is part of Green Township called Dent?
April 23, 2024
UC College of Arts and Sciences professor tells WVXU that Ohio's glacial past might explain how Dent got its name.
Local 12: Local universities open Taylor Swift courses
April 22, 2024
In the lead up to the release of Taylor Swift's new album, "The Tortured Poets Department," several media outlets covered classes offered at UC that focus on the singer's music and poetry. UC offers three classes that cover the pop icon: a general music course at CCM and two classes at A&S.