Digital Humanities @ ASECS10
The following information is drawn from the tentative schedule circulated in October 2009.
ECCO, EEBO, and the Burney Collection: Some ‘Noisy Feedback’
Session 17 — Thursday, 18 March — 9:45-11:15am
Chair: Anna BATTIGELLI, State University of New York, Plattsburgh
Participants:
Sayre GREENFIELD, University of Pittsburgh, Greensburg
Stephen KARIAN, Marquette University
James E. MAY, Pennsylvania State University, DuBois
Eleanor F. SHEVLIN, West Chester University
Michael F. SUAREZ, S.J., Rare Book School, University of Virginia
Respondents
Scott DAWSON, Gale/Cengage
Brian GEIGER, ESTC
Jo-Anne HOGAN, Proquest
The Digital Eighteenth Century 2.0 — I
Session 68 — Thursday, 18 March — 4:15pm-5:45pm
Chair: Lisa MARUCA, Wayne State University
Participants:
Randall CREAM, University of South Carolina
Molly O’Hagan HARDY, University of Texas at Austin
Laura MANDELL, Miami University, Ohio
The Digital Eighteenth Century 2.0 — II
Session 110 — Friday, 19 March — 9:45am-11:15am
Chair: George H. WILLIAMS, University of South Carolina, Upstate
Participants:
Sharon HARROW, Shippensburg University
Tonya HOWE, Marymount University
Benjamin PAULEY, Eastern Connecticut State University
Adrianne WADEWITZ, Indiana University, Bloomington
Digital Humanities and the Eighteenth Century: Pros and Cons
Session 128 — Friday, 19 March — 11:30am-1:00pm
Chair: Jeffrey RAVEL, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Participants:
Alison MURI, University of Saskatchewan, “From Ctrl-F to Digital Editions: The Challenges and Successes of Teaching the Eighteenth Century with Digital Texts and Tools”
Benjamin PAULEY, Eastern Connecticut State University, “Re-membering the Eighteenth-Century Book”
Sean TAKETS, George Mason University, “Recent Developments at the Center for History and New Media”