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3 Jun 2015

Digital Diasporas

By |2015-12-14T21:35:32-05:00Jun 3, 2015|

Digital Diasporas was the first conference of its kind to bring together to discuss on-going projects and also debate the theoretical, methodological, and pedagogical issues raised by the intersection of the fields of Digital Humanities and African American/African Diaspora Studies.

3 Jun 2015

Just a Click Away From Home: Ecuadorian Migration, Nostalgia, and Technology in Transnational Times

By |2015-12-19T01:06:46-05:00Jun 3, 2015|

Silvia Mejia was a Clara and Robert Vambery Distinguished Graduate Fellow and MITH Graduate Fellow during academic years 2004-05 and 2005-06. Working from within the Comparative Literature program with John Fuegi, and with MITH Director Martha Nell Smith, Mejia focused on three different narrations of migration from Ecuador to the United States, Spain and Italy. The resulting documentary video and its study guide explored how new technologies such as the Internet, satellite communications, email, videoconferences, and cell phones have changed the experience of displacement.

18 Apr 2014

Transforming The Afro-Caribbean World

By |2019-01-15T10:29:51-05:00Apr 18, 2014|

The University of Maryland’s Center for the History of the New America (CHNA) has partnered with MITH to develop the Transforming the Afro-Caribbean World (TAW) project to bring together scholars of the Panama Canal, Afro-Caribbean history, and experts in the digital humanities, data modeling, and visualization for a two-day planning workshop that will discuss a large-scale effort to explore Afro-Caribbean labor, migration, and the Panama Canal.

30 Sep 2013

Building an Accessible Future for the Humanities

By |2019-05-13T17:41:24-04:00Sep 30, 2013|

The Building an Accessible Future for the Humanities Project facilitated four two-day long workshops where humanists, librarians, information scientists, and cultural heritage professionals can learn about technologies, design standards, and accessibility issues associated with the use of digital technologies. This important project is a partnership with the BrailleSC.org project.

11 May 2012

BrailleSC

By |2019-01-15T10:31:29-05:00May 11, 2012|

BrailleSC makes it easy for content creators to convert a text into braille, thereby extending humanities content to hundreds of thousands of visually disabled readers. BrailleSC also experiment with making braille available visually through the WordPress interface.

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