THATCamp is a user-generated “unconference” on digital humanities organized and hosted by the Center for History and New Media at George Mason University, May 22–23, 2010. Learn More
Monday, May 24th, 2010 | Mark Sample
A number of THATCamp sessions generated collaboratively written notes, syllabi, and brainstorming documents, most frequently using Google Documents. Here’s a list of these collaborative, shared documents. Let me know what’s missing!
Monday, May 24th, 2010 | Amanda French
Thanks so much, all, for your participation in THATCamp this year. I personally had a great time, especially at the Data Liberation session. I’m so looking forward to the manifesto: you have no idea.
We do certainly plan to have THATCamp again next year, of course, and of course all those who are planning their own THATCamps would also be interested in your responses to the following two questions: What worked? What could use work? Let us know in the comments, or e-mail us at info@thatcamp.org.
"Fall 2009 Special Cluster: e-Science for the Arts and Humanities
Editors: Stuart Dunn and Tobias Blanke"
Séminaire de Master EHESS de Pierre Mounier et Marin Dacos
Éditer son carnet de recherche sur Hypotheses.org : tutoriaux, conseils, documentation
"Il y a tout juste un mois se déroulait le THATCamp Paris 2010. Les deux journées de discussions et de débats se sont conclues par la rédaction et l’adoption d’un Manifeste des digital humanities, qui peut être consulté (et signé) sur le carnet du THATCamp Paris 2010.
Voici quelques notes, fruit de mon point de vue de jeune docteur en sociologie. J’emprunte librement non seulement aux animateurs et animatrices des ateliers, mais aussi aux questions, remarques et critiques des participant-es. Le statut de ce qui suit est donc ambigu : si ce propos collectif est remis en forme par mes soins, nombre de formules et la quasi totalité des arguments ne sont pas de moi. Un grand merci à l’ensemble des personnes qui ont participé à ces deux journées…"
Panorama très utile des digital humanities en 2010 de Melissa Terras dans sa pléniaire de cloture énergique de #dh2010
This is an approximation of what I plan – or hope – to say in my closing plenary speech at Digital Humanities 2010 at King’s College London, June 2010. I’m not one for reading off prewritten speeches, however, so expect diversions and ad-libs in the recorded speech. I wanted to write a written record for those in the discipline who could not attend, or who were busy keeping their seats in the pub for the World Cup semi final.