Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
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Session Overview |
Date: Tuesday, 30/May/2023 | |||
8:00am - 8:30am |
Refreshment Break 4 Location: Ross Building S103 |
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8:30am - 10:00am |
Session 10: Panel Location: Ross Building S507 Chair: Aaron Tucker Reckoning with the DH of Future Present: Operationalizing Media Archaeological Potentialites in Digital Scholarship |
Session 11: Gaming Location: Ross Building S103 Chair: Jason Boyd You can/’t see me through my avatar: Camouflage, protection and resistance techniques in 3D and VR contemporary art One does not simply play a game: Tapping into game worlds as cultural texts The Interactive Gamergate Network: Examinations in Transphobia and Transphobic Conspiracy during GamerGate “I am what you think I am”: How NPC Design Contributes to Narrative Expression in Emily Short's Galatea |
Session 12: Panel Location: Ross Building S105 Chair: Marcello Vitali-Rosati Collaboration et production du savoir : pour une herméneutique des structures |
10:00am - 10:30am |
Refreshment Break 5 Location: Ross Building S103 |
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10:30am - 12:00pm |
Session 13: Data Location: Ross Building S507 Chair: Markus Reisenleitner Representational Data: a case study Reimagining the Data Problem in the Humanities: Data Type Versus Use-Case Long Literary Covid: Archive of the Digital Present (ADP) and Reflections on the Meaning of Data About Pandemic Literary Events |
Session 14: Network Analysis Location: Ross Building S103 Chair: Giulia Ferretti Historical Social Network Analysis: The Apprenticeship Networks of London Brewers, 1530-1800 “The influence of an oppressed sex”: Visualizing and Analyzing the Presence of Female Authors and Editors in Lord Byron’s Networked Library |
Session 15: Collaboration and Bias Location: Ross Building S105 Where ‘fires of collaboration can be stoked’: Collaboration in a DH team Growing the Digital Humanities: Perspectives from Australian experience On the Necessity of Collaboration: the Post-Human Scholar and the Classical Theorist |
12:00pm - 1:30pm |
Lunch Break 2 |
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1:30pm - 3:00pm |
Joint Keynote: Dr. Eve Tuck, "Enlivening the Practice of Collaborative Indigenous Research: A New Digital Garden" Location: Curtis Lecture Halls B106 A Joint Keynote with the Canadian Sociological Association, the Canadian Association for Studies in Indigenous Education, the Canadian Society for the Study of Education, the Indigenous Literary Studies Association, and Women’s and Gender Studies et Recherches Féministes.
Dr. Eve Tuck is Associate Professor of Critical Race and Indigenous Studies at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), University of Toronto. She is Canada Research Chair of Indigenous Methodologies with Youth and Communities. Tuck is the founding director of the Tkaronto CIRCLE Lab.
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3:00pm - 3:30pm |
Refreshment Break 6 Location: Ross Building S103 |
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3:30pm - 5:00pm |
Session 16: The Digital World Location: Ross Building S103 Chair: Barbara Bordalejo Bottom-Down Protocols : Digital Justice and the P2P Architecture A World Shaped by Computer Technologies Is Code Speech? |
Session 17: Cancelled |
Session 18: Digital Humanities at Different Scales Location: Ross Building S105 Chair: Kyle Douglas Dase Ross S105 (Base AV)
Between Distant and Close Reading: A Survey of Mixed Methodology in Digital Humanities Words Are Hard: Untangling Understandings of How Places were Important in REED London’s London Mapping LINCS |