schedule
Sessions will be in the Jury Space on the first floor of the Stuckeman Family Building
See this map for building location and location of nearby parking.
There will be 15 minute breaks after each session
Monday, July 16
2:00pm - Project Presentations
Matt Shoemaker (Temple University), “Connecting Gaming Communities and Corporations to their History: The Gen Con Program Database”
Zachary Enick (University of Pittsburgh), “La Lega Toscana di Protezione: A Social, Spatial, and Linguistic Study”
Kathryn Salzer (Penn State University), “Digital Humanities in the Classroom: 1968”
3:30pm - Interactive demonstration
Joel Hunt (Penn State Erie), “Penn State Erie Interactive Sound and Music Map”
4:00pm - Keynote: Whitney Trettien
5:30pm - Reception at The Federal Taphouse
Tuesday, July 17
8:00am - Breakfast
9:00am - Session 1
Heather Froehlich (Penn State University), “Using the Historical Thesaurus of the Oxford English Dictionary in Literary-Historical Analysis”
Laura McCann (Carnegie Mellon University), “Identifying the Rhetorical Strategies of Fake News”
10:30am - Session 2
Derek Prijatelj, Timothy Ireland, and Mathew Kaufman (Duquesne University), “A Computational Linguistic Approach to Crowd Noise Generation”
Rosa A. Eberly (Penn State University), “Harry Shearer’s Character Machine: Sounding Out the Le Show Archive”
Avery J. Wiscomb and Daniel Evans (Carnegie Mellon University), “Herb Simon and His Books”
11:45am - Lunch Break (Sandwiches, salads, drinks, and dessert will be available)
1:15pm - Session 3
Joan E. Beaudoin (Wayne State University), “A Thousand Silos: Art Museums, Online Collections, and the Digital Humanities”
Emily Logan (Temple University), “Impacting University Library Makerspace Culture through Citizen Science and Sustainability”
2:45pm - Session 4
Roberto Vargas (Swarthmore College), “Examining Assumptions: Collaborating in the Classroom with Digital Tools”
Joshua Korenblat (State University of New York at New Paltz), “How Digital Humanists and Designers Can Close Gaps in Learning Experiences”
Sasha Renninger, Scott Enderle, and Najay Greenidge (University of Pennsylvania), “Building a Student-Powered DH Foundry”
4:15pm - Concurrent Workshops
Todd Bryant and Ryan Burke (Dickinson University), “Drupal for Digital Humanities Projects”
Joshua Catalano, Laura Crossley, and Amanda Regan (George Mason University), “Awash in a Sea of Content? Keep Up with the Field Using PressForward”
Wednesday, July 18
8:00am - Breakfast
9:00am - Session 5
Alex Wermer-Colan (Temple University), “Calculating the Politics of Aesthetics: Distant Reading Post-9/11 Iraq War Movie Reviews”
John Hunter and Sarah Eckermann (Bucknell University), “Form and Color in Cinematic Analysis; or, How Digital Tools Can Restore the Visual to Film”
Rafael Matos (Indiana University of Pennsylvania), “Double Consciousness (Re)Presented”
10:30am - Session 6
Patrick Juola and Nick Costello (Duquense University), “Authorship Attribution Works on Recipes, Too”
Derek Prijatelj and Nicholas Marshman (Duquesne University), “Toward Cross-Language Automated Authorship Attribution”
11:45am - Closing remarks