Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Summer Seminar Series on Digital Research

University Libraries and the Graduate College announce...
A Summer Seminar Series on Digital Research!

We are excited to offer this series of presentations and a culminating workshop that will allow WMU graduate students, faculty, and staff to:
Ø  become familiar with the vocabulary of digital research, projects, and publications
Ø  see models of digital projects undertaken by our faculty and supported by our library, and to see  what other institutions are doing, as well
Ø  learn how to incorporate these projects into your own teaching and become acquainted with tools to build your own digital project

Events (all will take place in Waldo Library, Classroom A):
Thursday, May 30, 2:30-4
"Digital Gower and the Virtual Library" – Dr. Eve Salisbury, Department of English
Dr. Salisbury will discuss and demo the "The Gower Project," a multi-site collaborative enterprise providing access to manuscripts, editions, sources, and links advancing the study of 14th-century poet John Gower. Dr. Salisbury will also discuss her involvement with the online publication Accessus: A Journal of Premodern Literature and New Media.

Tuesday, June 4, 2:30-4
"The Challenges and Opportunities of Digital Publishing" – Dr. Kenneth Steuer, Department of History
Dr. Steuer will describe working with the American Historical Association’s Gutenberg-e digital publishing initiative at Columbia University, his collaborative work with Indiana University and various United Nations Archives Collections in Geneva and his current digital archive.

Wednesday, June 5, 2:30-4
"Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca and His Governorship of the Río de la Plata and other projects: Digital Manuscripts and Images" – Dr. Pablo Pastrana-Perez, Department of Spanish and Sheila Bair, University Libraries
Dr. Pastrana-Pérez will present his project on Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca and will discuss how to bring archival materials from the sixteenth century in manuscript form to a modern reader, and the transition from parchment or paper to the computer screen. Pastrana-Pérez is an associate professor of Spanish and works primarily with medieval and early-modern texts. Professor Bair will discuss her work with metadata and TEI (Text Encoding Initiative) using WMU Libraries’ Civil War Diaries digital collection.  Dr. Bair has served on a number of national working groups on standardizing and optimizing searching on the web.

Tuesday, June 11, 2:30-5pm
Workshop: Models and Resources for Digital Scholarship: Tools offered by Waldo Library and Beyond – University Libraries Digital Experts
A chance to start planning your own digital project! Learn about tools and methods like data-mining, metadata, mapping, the WMU digitization center, and Scholarworks.

Please RSVP for the workshop and talks you plan to attend.   Sign up at:  https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/digitalscholarship
Please bring questions and ideas about how to apply these tools and models to your own research, and plan to stay to talk to our presenters and experts!

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Dissertation Seminar for Lit Scholars at Newberry (5/15/13 deadline)

The Newberry Center for Renaissance Studies announces its
2013 Dissertation Seminar for Literary Scholars
Directed by Wendy Wall and William West, both of Northwestern University

Application deadline: May 15, 2013
Seminar will meet September 27, October 18, November 15, and December 6, 2013

http://www.newberry.org/09272013-2013-dissertation-seminar-literary-scholars-0

This seminar aims to create a broad-based community of graduate students at the beginning stages of work on their dissertations in early modern literature. The goal of the seminar will be to offer comments, perspectives, methods, and criticisms from a larger group of specialists than would be available on any single campus, and to encourage broader and deeper use of the unique resources of the Newberry Library and the Center for Renaissance Studies.

Enrollment limited to 12 students who have completed all examinations and achieved ABD status by the time of the seminar; participants will be selected by competitive application.

Printable flyer--please post and distribute: http://www.newberry.org/sites/default/files/calendar-attachments/2013DissertationSeminar.pdf

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Graduate students from Center for Renaissance Studies consortium member institutions may be eligible to apply for travel funding to attend this program. Each member university sets its own policies and deadlines; contact your Representative Council member in advance for authorization. For details, see http://www.newberry.org/newberry-renaissance-consortium-grants.

You have received this message because, according to our records, you are a faculty member or student at a member institution of the Center for Renaissance Studies consortium (http://www.newberry.org/center-renaissance-studies-consortium-members). If you would like to be removed from our mailing list, please write to renaissance@newberry.org. To join our mailing list, or update your information, use this form: http://www.newberry.org/renaissance-center-mailing-list.

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Karen Christianson, PhD
Associate Director
Center for Renaissance Studies
The Newberry Library
60 West Walton Street
Chicago, IL 60610-7324
phone: 312-255-3539
fax: 312-255-3502
christiansonk@newberry.org
www.newberry.org/renaissance