Change-agents -- thought you'd be interested in an event this upcoming
Monday on an unconference where technology and humanities disciplines
converged.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Madeline Sanabria <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Nov 5, 2010 at 12:12 PM
Subject: [dub] iSchool Research Conversation, Monday, November 8th:
'THATCamp PNW: When Technologies and the Humanities Converge on the
Fly' (Speaker: Jentery Sayers)
To: faculty <ifac at u.washington.edu>, staff <istaff at u.washington.edu>,
PhD <iphds at u.washington.edu>, INFO <imajors at u.washington.edu>, MSIM
<imsim at u.washington.edu>, MLIS <imlis at u.washington.edu>


WHO: Jentery Sayers is a Ph.D. Candidate completing his dissertation
in English at the University of Washington. Together with Paige Morgan
(English), he organized THATCamp PNW at the UW in 2010. His research
falls broadly under the umbrella of digital humanities, with an
emphasis on cultural histories of technologies, new media theory and
practice, and computers and composition. In July and August 2010, with
support from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the journal
Vectors, he participated in the "Broadening the Digital Humanities"
Institute at the University of Southern California, where he developed
a proof of concept for his hybrid (i.e., part print, part digital)
dissertation, "How Text Lost Its Source: Magnetic Recording Cultures."

WHAT: THATCamp PNW: When Technologies and the Humanities Converge on the Fly

WHERE: Mary Gates Hall 420

WHEN: Monday, November 8, 2010, 12:00-1:20pm

WHY: THATCamp PNW, or The Humanities And Technology Camp Pacific
Northwest, is a regional, user-generated unconference premised on the
original THATCamp concept, which was founded in 2008 at the Center for
History and New Media at George Mason University. In 2009, the first
THATCamp PNW occurred at Washington State University in Pullman, and
on October
23 and 24, 2010 the event took place at the University of Washington,
with support from the Simpson Center for the Humanities, Microsoft
Research, UW Libraries, and the Henry Art Gallery. More at:
http://www.thatcamppnw.org/.

This conversation will begin with a brief reflection on THATCamp PNW
2010 from the perspective of one of its organizers. Jentery will begin
by asking why an unconference in the first place. What does it afford
that typical conferences in the humanities do not? He will then
transition into what, on paper and in practice, THATCamp PNW 2010
looked like: who participated, from what institutions and
organizations, and to what effects on a learning climate stressing
humanities approaches to new technologies and media. Jentery will
conclude with a few lessons learned from the event, namely the topics
humanities researchers seemed to stress and what research trajectories
are apparently emerging in the region.

Collaboration across the fields of humanities and information studies
will be of particular interest.

**Food provided. Please bring your own beverage.**



_______________________________________________
dub mailing list
dub at dub.washington.edu
http://dub.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/dub

Reply via email to