The Global Digital Humanities Symposium took place on April 8-9, 2016.
Find out more about the symposium at http://msuglobaldh.org/ about/
Featured speakers included:
- Dorothy Kim
- Alex Gil
- Radhika Gajjala
- Hoyt Long
Digital humanities has developed in a range of disciplines and locations across the globe. Initially emergent from initiatives in textual encoding, database building, or critiques of design and media cultures, the field is increasingly drawn together. Speakers presented scholarship works at the intersections of what had been disparate approaches. Much digital humanities scholarship is driven by an ethical commitment to preserve and broaden access to cultural materials. The most engaged global DH scholarship values digital tools that enhance the capacity of scholarly critique to reflect a broad range of histories, as well as present geographical and cultural positions. Projects that are sought to bring grant resources from the West are often met with well-developed and challenging critiques emergent around the globe from communities deeply engaged in their own cultural preservation, as well as in building relationships with other similarly engaged scholars. This symposium included an extended workshop and a mixture of presentation types and engaged squarely with issues of power, access, and equity as they affect scholarship in the digital humanities.
Invited speakers and local presenters at this two-day symposium addressed how the interdisciplinary practices of digital humanities can and should speak to the global cultural record and the contemporary situation of our planet. Of particular interest was work relevant to or stemming from challenges in the Global South. The symposium sought to strengthen networks of exchange among DH scholars nationally and internationally.
Themes and topics of this symposium included:
- the practice of digital humanities across linguistic, economic, and technological divides
- digital humanities in the light of current geopolitics
- the environmental impacts of digital humanities research
- the inflection of local accents in the practices and ethics of digital humanities
It was free and open to the public. Registration was at http://msuglobaldh.org/ registration/