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ODH Update
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Author: |
SuperUser Account |
Created: |
2/27/2008 12:27 PM |
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The latest news from the Office of Digital Humanities |
By Jennifer Serventi on
6/15/2009 9:05 AM
I'm very happy to say that the NEH has just announced five new awards from our Institutes for Advanced Topics in the Digital Humanities program. These grants support national or regional training programs for scholars and advanced graduate students to broaden and extend their knowledge of digital humanities.
These awards are part of a larger group of 154 awards announced today by the NEH. For a full state-by-state list of all the awards, please see today's press release.
Awards in the Institutes for Advanced Topics in the Digital Humanities program (click on each for more details):
George Mason University -- Fairfax, VA
One Week, One Tool: A Digital Humanities Barn Raising
Tom Scheinfeldt, Project Director
Outright: $249,221
To support: A one week institute for twelve participants on the principles of humanities-centered...
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By Brett Bobley on
6/1/2009 1:33 PM
This is Part II of a series of posts highlighting recent white papers (Part I also available). Numerous ODH programs (and some programs in other NEH divisions and offices) require the grantee to submit a "white paper" at the conclusion of the grant. In ODH, we publish these white papers in our Library of Funded Projects. In the white paper, the grantee provides a summary of the grant activities, what they learned, recommended best practices, and even what they might have done differently. By making these white papers freely available, members of the public -- including other prospective applicants -- can learn from what has already been done and build upon it.
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By Brett Bobley on
5/13/2009 3:38 PM
Numerous ODH programs (and some programs in other NEH divisions and offices) require the grantee to submit a "white paper" at the conclusion of the grant. In ODH, we publish these white papers in our Library of Funded Projects. In the white paper, the grantee provides a summary of the grant activities, what they learned, recommended best practices, and even what they might have done differently. By making these white papers freely available, members of the public -- including other prospective applicants -- can learn from what has already been done and build upon it.
In a series of posts, I'll be highlighting some of the white papers we have recently added to the library.
Update: Part II of this series is now available.
In each case below, just click the title and then scroll down to find the "download" button to access the full report:
Approaches...
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By Brett Bobley on
4/29/2009 1:01 PM
The NEH’s Division of Preservation and Access has recently released the guidelines for the program “Humanities Collections and Reference Resources.” This program supports projects that preserve and create intellectual access to such collections as books, journals, newspapers, manuscript and archival materials, maps, still and moving images, sound recordings, art, and objects of material culture. The grant can cover activities such as digitizing materials, cataloging collections, implementing preservation measures, developing databases, and many others. Please consult the guidelines for more details. The deadline for this program is July 15, 2009.
Please note that "Humanities Collections and Reference Resources" is a separate program from "Research and Development." The R&D program has a deadline of July 30, 2009 and you can read more about it in this earlier ODH Update...
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By Brett Bobley on
4/13/2009 1:53 PM
I'm pleased to announce that Working Together or Apart: Promoting the Next Generation of Digital Scholarship is now available for download via the CLIR (Council on Library and Information Resources) website.
Working Together is the final report from a symposium sponsored by the NEH and CLIR. The symposium was held on September 15th, 2008, and brought together 30 leading scholars to discuss research challenges in the humanities, social sciences, and computation. The report includes a terrific overview of the symposium written by Amy Friedlander of CLIR as well as a series of original papers commissioned for the meeting. The papers cover a wide range of topics that should be of great interest to the...
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By Jason Rhody on
4/8/2009 3:39 PM
We are pleased to announce the awardees from the DFG/NEH Bilateral Symposia and Workshops program. This program offers support for digital humanities projects funded by NEH in collaboration with the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft e.V., DFG) in Germany. These grants require collaboration between U.S. and German entities and provide funding for up to two joint symposia or workshops in the area of digital humanities.
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By Brett Bobley on
4/7/2009 1:53 PM
The NEH’s Division of Preservation and Access has just released the guidelines for the program “Preservation and Access Research and Development.” Folks working on digital humanities projects should definitely give this program a close look. The R&D program supports projects that address major challenges in preserving or providing access to humanities collections and resources. This includes funding R&D efforts to develop tools, standards, and methodologies for accessing digitized collections. In addition, you’ll see that this year the R&D program is particularly encouraging applications in the areas of digital preservation, preventive conservation, and preservation of and access to recorded sound and moving image collections.
Here at the NEH, we see the R&D program as a natural next step for some graduates of the Digital Humanities Start-Up Grant program. Many of the Start-Up grant projects are conducting basic research, building early prototypes, and investigating new methodologies for scholarship in areas related to digital collections. So the R&D program may very well be a logical next step to move from the planning to implementation phase....
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By Brett Bobley on
3/23/2009 9:44 AM
I just received word that the deadline for applying to the NEH-funded Vectors-IML Summer Institute on Multimodal Scholarship has been extended to March 29th.
The institute is entitled "Broadening the Digital Humanities" and was funded via our grant program "Institutes for Advanced Topics in the Digital Humanities."
The institute is being hosted by the University of Southern California from July 13-August 7, 2009. Application instructions [pdf] are available now, but act quickly!
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