“Head-and-Shoulder Hunting in the Americas: Exploring Lobotomy’s Visual Culture”

a public lecture by Miriam Posner

April 15th, 2015, 4:30 P.M – 6:00 P.M.
103 Hillcrest

Drawing of hand preforming lobotomy

Walter Freeman, the world’s foremost proponent and practitioner of lobotomy, was also an obsessive photographer. He almost invariably took photos of his patients before and after surgery, often tracking them down years after the operation to capture their images. These cross-country trips to photograph patients, which Freeman called head-and-shoulder hunting expeditions, consumed the physician during the last years of his career.

What do we do with an archive like this? Its contents can tell us volumes about the medical epistemology that made lobotomy thinkable. But how can we avoid replicating Freeman’s own rhetorical moves, in which the photographs were mobilized as evidence during scientific presentations?

During this talk, Posner will describe the visual rhetoric that defined the scientific moment from which lobotomy emerged, and demonstrate some digital methods for placing them in context. Against the background of this history, Posner asks, what is the contemporary digital scholar’s responsibility for working with, writing about, and displaying images of human beings in distress?

Miriam Posner is Coordinator and Core Faculty Member of the Digital Humanities program at the University of California, Los Angeles.

How Did They Make That? Reverse Engineering Digital Projects

a presentation by Miriam Posner

April 15th, 2015, 12:00 P.M – 1:20 P.M.
CTLR Lounge

Photo of a Wrench
Photo by Flickr user Kate Ter Haar, used under Creative Commons licensing.

The catch-all term “digital project” can refer to a daunting array of technologies and methods. For a newcomer (or even an experienced practitioner), it can be hard to know where to start. In this presentation, we’ll examine a range of digital projects to get a handle on what’s out there. Then I’ll share some simple principles for figuring out the sources and technologies that constitute a “project.” You can use these principles to model your own project, or just to understand and evaluate someone else’s.

Miriam Posner is Coordinator and Core Faculty Member of the Digital Humanities program at the University of California, Los Angeles. 

This demonstration is open to the entire Middlebury community. All are welcome!

Lunch will be provided beginning at 12 pm, with the presentation to follow at 12:15. Please RSVP by signing up below.

[sign_up_sheet]

Introduction to Video Editing Workshop

April 24th, 1:30-3:00 P.M.
Wilson Media Lab

Photo of video editing software on computer screen
Photo by Flickr user WCN 24/7, used under Creative Commons licensing.

In this workshop we’ll be working with Adobe Premiere Pro editing software to introduce the basics of narrative and non-fiction editing. Instruction will be focused on beginning to intermediate editors, but all skill levels are welcome. For the first hour we will work toward an assembly edit of an interview for a non-fiction film and a rough cut of a scene from a narrative short film (media will be provided). Editing concepts and software features will be introduced and explained as they are encountered during the editing process.

Each participant will have their own workstation and can actively follow along throughout the process. During the last half hour of the workshop participants can choose one of the sequences (narrative or non-narrative) and can continue putting some polish on them while I assist and answer questions.

This workshop will be led by Ethan Murphy, Media Production Specialist with assistance from Matt Lennon, DLA Arts Technology Assistant.

Sign up below to reserve your spot.
[sign_up_sheet]

Building Digital Exhibits with Omeka

March 3rd, 2015, 4:30-5:30 P.M.
Wilson Media Lab (DFL 220)

Seeking alternative models for research essays?
Looking for ways to engage your students with public audiences?
In need of a digital supplement to your book project? 

With Omeka, you can create beautiful online exhibits of your art, videos, documents, or other collections. Omeka, sometimes referred to as “WordPress for museums,” is a free, flexible, and open source web-publishing platform for the display of library, museum, archives, and scholarly collections and exhibitions. It was created at the Center for History and New Media (CHNM) at George Mason University and is one of the most widely implemented digital humanities tools.

This workshop will introduce you to the basics of planning a digital exhibit and get you started with your own Omeka.net digital exhibit. DLA Post-doc Alicia Peaker will be leading the workshop. She has also worked as the Director of Our Marathon, a digital archive, ​built with Omeka, of crowdsourced materials related to the 2013 Boston bombings.

While enrollment is limited, materials used in the workshop, including the presentation slide deck, can be found at go.middlebury.edu/omeka.

[sign_up_sheet]

omekanetlogo

Behind the Scenes – A New Series

Photo of red stage curtains.
Photo by Flickr user rosmary.

Thursdays, 12:30-1:30 P.M.
CTLR Lounge (campus map)

Special Sessions

In spring 2015 the DLA is launching a special series called “Behind the Scenes: Demystifying Project Development in the Digital Liberal Arts” that will run every other week during the Brown Bag Lunches. During these sessions, Middlebury faculty and staff will share stories and tips from their experiences creating digital projects. Here’s a list of the line-up for this spring:

Feb. 19 – Daniel Houghton, (Arts Technology Specialist, DLA), “Collaborative Media Production”
March 5 – Holly Allen (American Studies), “Doing Digital Public History at Middlebury”
March 19 – Anne Knowles (Geography), “Dealing with Data”
April 2 – Christopher Andrews (Computer Science), “Bespoke Visualization”
April 16 – Carrie Anderson (HARC), “Planning and Documenting a Digital Project”
April 30 – Louisa Stein (Film & Media), “Teaching Digital Scholarship and Citizenship”

Stay in the loop for future DLA events by signing up for our mailing list in the right-hand column.

 

DLA Reading Group: Spring 2015

The DLA will continue to host a bi-monthly faculty reading group to explore themes and issues in the digital liberal arts by discussing peer-reviewed articles, short books, blog posts, digital projects, and websites. This spring, we will examine the complex, contentious landscapes of the digital and spatial humanities. Led by Alicia Peaker and Anne Knowles, the reading group is an open forum for learning about the plurality of approaches and critically assessing their applications in digital projects.

Faculty are welcome whenever they can come. Watch this space for session readings.

Logistics:

We will meet every other Friday from 1:30 – 3: 00 P.M. at Alicia’s house (email dla@middlebury.edu for address). Coffee, tea, and light refreshments will be offered.

February 27th – The Spatial Humanities
Readings:

March 6th – no meeting

March 20th – Databases

(please note, this meeting has a different location. Please email Anne Knowles for address and directions)

April 3rd – Data & Metadata

May 1st  – Data Visualization

May 12th – Creative Commons, Fair Use & Digital Projects

3D Printing Workshop

February 24, 12:30-1:45 P.M.
Johnson Design Lab (campus map)

Photo of Makerbot Industries Replicator 2 3D Printer
Image by Flickr Commons user Creative Tools.

What is 3D Printing and why are so many people thrilled by the possibilities of this new technology? Come find out at a friendly, low-tech introduction to the tool. See the 3D printer in action. Get inspired by examples of what other people have done with the tool. Bring a couple of ideas for your upcoming projects and we’ll brainstorm ways that 3D printing technology can enrich your project goals.

This workshop will be led by Daniel Houghton, the DLA Arts Technology Specialist.

[sign_up_sheet]

Crafting Digital Narratives with Scalar

January 21, 2:45 – 4:15 P.M.
Wilson Media Lab (220 Davis Family Library)

Screen shot of Scalar book project

From non-linear storytelling to rich, scholarly annotations, this workshop will encourage new ways of thinking about writing in digital environments. Using a web application called Scalar, you will begin to craft a media-rich digital narrative. Scalar is a free, open source authoring and publishing platform that’s designed to make it easy for authors to assemble media from multiple sources and juxtapose them with their own writing in a variety of ways. No technical expertise required.

This workshop is currently full. Please contact Alicia Peaker for a schedule of upcoming workshops or to set up a consultation.

You can view the slides for this workshop here.

Sample Scalar projects referenced in the workshop:

 

Building Digital Exhibits with Omeka

January 14, 2015, 2:45-4:15 P.M. &
January 27, 2015, 2:45-4:15 P.M.
Wilson Media Lab (DFL 220)

DLA Post-doc Alicia Peaker will be leading two introductory workshops to Omeka, an open-source, web-based platform for building digital exhibits. The workshop is part of the Winter Term Digital Media Boot Camp. While enrollment is limited, materials used in the workshop, including the presentation slide deck, can be found at go.middlebury.edu/omeka.

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Meet the Fellows Special Brown Bag Lunch

Photo of Hang Du presenting her research

On Thursday, December 4th, the DLA hosted a special brown bag lunch session featuring presentations by current DLA faculty fellows. Professors Hang Du (Faculty Fellow 2014-2015) and Louisa Stein (Faculty Fellow 2014) and their student research assistants shared the challenges and serendipitous discoveries of working with new digital technologies.

In her research, Du uses methods from corpus and computational linguistics to assess Chinese language learners’ uses of the “bah” construction. Aaron Kano-Bower (’15), a Computer Science major and Chinese minor, wrote several programs in close collaboration with Du to organize and standardize her large collection of transcribed interviews with Chinese language learners. Du is currently in the process of analyzing and comparing this corpus to other available corpora of spoken Chinese.

Stein is currently using Scalar, an online publishing platform, to compose a book on the transformative media produced by members of fan cultures. Her research assistants Denisse De La Cruz (’17) and Annie Wymard (’15) discussed the digital exhibits they have created using Scalar. While each student has focused on different areas of media and fan culture, they have contributed both to the form and content of Stein’s larger Scalar book.

[Photos by Matt Lennon (’13), DLA Arts Tech Assistant]

Academic Roundtable: Rethinking the Digital Experience and the Terms of Digital Engagement

December 9, 2014, 12:15 P.M.
CTLR Lounge

This special edition of the Academic Roundtable,“Rethinking the Digital Experience and the Terms of Digital Engagement,” will feature Will Thomas, Chair of the Department of History at the University of Nebraska and Faculty Fellow of the Center for Digital Research in the Humanities and the John and Catherine Angle Chair in the Humanities.

Among the questions to be explored are: How do we structure our classrooms and pedagogies around the open web, how do we work at smaller scales, how do we develop a more community-based (reciprocal) approach to the digital for our students?

Lunch will be served (and will be available at noon). Please RSVP to dbernier@middlebury.edu by noon, Friday, December 5.

The Academic Roundtable Series is co-sponsored by the Center for Teaching, Learning & Research and the Library.

Why the Digital? Why the Digital Liberal Arts? A Public Lecture by William Thomas

December 8, 2014, 12:00 P.M.
Axinn 229

The Digital Liberal Arts Executive Committee is delighted to announce our fall speaker, William G. Thomas III, one of the country’s leading spatial historians and digital humanists. Will’s public lecture on Monday, Dec. 8, will assess the current state of “the digital” in academe, including the digital humanities, and make the case for integrating digital research practices and pedagogies into the liberal arts more fully and broadly than has yet been realized. This talk will critically appraise the digital humanities as well as examine models of collaboration and integration of research and teaching that can be applied across the liberal arts.

Will Thomas has been a voice of reason while leading the development of spatial history, first at University of Virginia, where he co-authored the award-winning “Valley of the Shadow” project, and now at University of Nebraska’s Center for Digital Research in the Humanities. Throughout his digital engagement, he has remained an archival scholar. His latest book, The Iron Way,  was a finalist for the prestigious Lincoln Prize.

William G. Thomas III is currently the Chair of the Department of History at the University of Nebraska, where he is a Faculty Fellow of the Center for Digital Research in the Humanities and the John and Catherine Angle Chair in the Humanities.

Lunch will be provided beginning at 12:00 P.M. The lecture will begin at 12:15 P.M.

Full text of this lecture can be found on Will Thomas’s blog, here. A recording of the lecture can also be viewed below.

Promotional poster for Will Thomas's talk

Digital Enhancement Fund: Call for Proposals

We are very happy to announce a new faculty funding opportunity available through the Digital Liberal Arts Initiative. The Digital Enhancement Fund is intended to support faculty projects, in research or teaching, based on digital methods. Unlike some other DLA programs, the Digital Enhancement Fund is available to all faculty, whatever their home department or program or disciplinary background. 
 
The general purpose of this funding program is to encourage faculty to try new methods, learn new skills, or master advanced skills that will enhance their teaching or research. Funding may support acquisition of software or hardware that the College does not already provide and that regular departmental and other sources of internal funding cannot cover in an expedited fashion; hiring a student research assistant for a digital project; research travel related to a digital project; travel to conferences focused on digital research or teaching; travel to a training opportunity, such as a workshop on digital methods; or expenses related to bringing to campus a speaker or workshop instructor whose expertise will contribute to awareness or training in an important digital tool or method.
 
Successful applicants will be required to submit a short report at the conclusion of the award that explains how the tool, workshop, conference, or lecture contributed to the applicant’s professional development.
 
The DLA Executive Committee will review proposed projects in consultation with appropriate technical specialists and faculty experts to ensure that each project can be supported. When projects intersect with one of the DLA Hubs, they will be reviewed by the appropriate Hub faculty and staff.
 
Proposals will be reviewed on two schedules.  Proposals for projects up to $3,000 will be reviewed on a rolling basis. Projects with larger budgets will be reviewed twice each semester. This year there will be three reviews of larger projects, with deadlines for applications on Dec. 1, March 15, and May 1. Applicants will be notified of decisions as soon as possible. Please be advised that DLA funding is limited; it is unlikely that we can consider funding requests of over $10,000.
 
The online proposal form lays out the specific information required in applications.  Applicants are advised to consult with Anne Knowles or Jason Mittell (faculty co-directors of DLA) or Alicia Peaker (DLA Postdoctoral Fellow) before submitting their application, to discuss the suitability of the proposal and budget. To request a consultation, email dla@middlebury.edu.

Scalar Sandbox

November 10, 2014, 2:00-5:00 P.M.
Wilson Media Lab (220 Davis Family Library)

The Scalar Sandbox is an extremely informal opportunity for people to bring in their Scalar books, projects, or assignments and work on them at their own pace. Alicia will be there to help with any technical questions that might come up and to consult on project structures, grading criteria for digital assignments, or any other matters related to Scalar. No need to attend for the entire time – feel free to drop in and out as your schedule allows.

Scalar is a free, open-source authoring and publishing platform that’s designed to make it easy for authors to assemble media from multiple sources and juxtapose them with their own writing in a variety of ways.

DLA Winter Term Workshops at the Digital Media Bootcamp 2015

Winter Term 2015
Wilson Media Lab (220 Davis Family Library)

Close-up photo of people typing on computers.DLA Post-doc Alicia Peaker will be leading two 90-minute workshops as part of the Digital Media Bootcamp in winter term 2015. The first, “Crafting Digital Narratives with Scalar,” will explore writing with and through the digital environment of Scalar.  From non-linear storytelling to rich, scholarly annotations, Scalar is a free, open-source authoring and publishing platform that’s designed to make it easy for authors to assemble media from multiple sources and juxtapose them with their own writing in a variety of ways.

The second workshop, “Building Digital Exhibits with Omeka,” will walk through how to create beautiful online exhibits of your art or archival materials with Omeka, an open-source archival platform. This workshop may also be of interest to faculty who would like to build digital archives or collections in their classes.

All Digital Media Bootcamp workshops are open to all students, faculty, and staff. To sign up for any of the free workshops, go to go/dmbootcamp.