• DH Lunch Meetups for Grad Students

    This is a monthly gathering for graduate students who are doing or interested in digital humanities. Anyone is welcome to join once or regularly. We will start with one grad student sharing informally about their work, whether in the classroom or in research. After about 15 minutes, then the rest of the time will be left to the group to share their work, discuss recent or upcoming conferences, and/or talk about the field and MSU DH generally.

    There will be soda and sandwiches provided. This gathering is meant to be informal, so even if you can only stop by for a few minutes, feel free to do so!

    The schedule for Fall 2017 is:

    • September 12, 12:00-1:00, Make Central (2nd Floor West, Main Library)
    • October 16, 12:00-1:00, WIDE (301 Bessey)
    • November 14, 12:00-1:00, LEADR (112 Old Horticulture)
    • December 6, 12:00-1:00, College of Arts and Letters (Linton Hall, Room 9)
  • Graduate Certificate

    Graduate Certificate

    Students from across MSU have the option to earn a Graduate Certificate in Digital Humanities. See the Curriculum page for further information.

  • Events Calendar

    Keep up to date on workshops, speakers, reading groups, and more by subscribing to the MSU DH Calendar. See the Events tab or subscribe directly here.

  • HASTAC Scholars – Call for applicants

    Digital Humanities in the College of Arts and Letters is pleased to support a number of HASTAC Scholars for the 2017-2019 academic years.

    Deadline for applicationsOctober 3

    Announcement of Award: October 11

    Are you an undergraduate or graduate student engaged with innovative projects and research at the intersection of digital media and learning, 21st-century education, and technology in the arts, humanities and sciences? Would you like to join an international conversation about the digital humanities? If so, you are invited to apply for the opportunity to become a 2017-2019 HASTAC scholar. As a Scholar, you will represent Michigan State University in HASTAC’s prestigious, online community. Successful candidates will each receive a $300 scholarship or travel reimbursement from the Digital Humanities Program in the College of Arts and Letters each year for two years.

    HASTAC (pronounced “haystack”), which stands for Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Advanced Collaboratory, is an interdisciplinary, international network of undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, as well as librarians, archivists, museum curators, publishers, and IT specialists. Members of the HASTAC community blog, host forums, organize events, and discuss new ideas, projects, and technologies that reconceive teaching, learning, research, writing and structuring knowledge. For more information about HASTAC Scholars and to see their discussion forums, please see the HASTAC Scholars website and also this page.

    You need to apply via this application before you apply on the HASTAC Scholars website. This is how we know who we can fund and is required.

    Successful candidates will:

    • Remain in good standing with the university.
    • Be an active participant in the Digital Humanities community at MSU by attending one or more events each semester related to the digital humanities, including workshops, speakers, socials.
    • Frequently engage, according to your interests and abilities, in the discussions taking place on the HASTAC website, as well as related events taking place during the year.
    • Between Sept. and May each year, contribute no fewer than two posts per semester to the HASTAC Scholars blog.
    • Report your activities at least once a semester to the faculty or academic staff mentor assigned to you.

    Applications will be evaluated based on the student’s activities in the areas of digital humanities technology, research, pedagogy and service to the community. Highly motivated students with limited exposure to the digital humanities are encouraged to apply. This opportunity is an excellent way to learn more about digital media and practices.

    In the applicationplease answer the following the questions:

    • Why do you want to become a HASTAC Scholar? What strengths, interests, and experience can you contribute to the HASTAC community?
    • How will being a HASTAC Scholar support your current work (coursework, teaching, and/or research) at MSU?

    Your application must include the name and contact information of a faculty or academic staff member willing to serve as your sponsor and mentor. Please also state your academic department and undergraduate/graduate status.

    Send applications and recommendations as Word Documents to Kristen Mapes, kmapes@msu.edu, with “YOURLASTNAME-HASTAC APP” as the subject line. Applications are due no later than 5:00 PM, October 3, 2017.  Members of the CAL Digital Humanities Steering Committee will review applications, and the Scholars will be announced no later than October 11. Selected scholars should make an application at the HASTAC website by October 15. Details for that procedure will follow if you are selected.

    Please email kmapes@msu.edu with any questions!

  • All Day Work-a-thon/Co-Work! May 22

    All Day Work-a-thon/Co-Work! May 22
    Summer Co-Working Day / Work-a-Thon

    Tuesday, March 7, 10am-5pm

    LEADR, Old Horticulture 112

    There will be coffee and snacks available, plus pizza for lunch.

    Summer has begun, which means a time to relax… and a time to get some work done! Join us in LEADR for the day, May 22 (9am-5pm) to get some work done together. Bring whatever you’d like to work on, and there will be people available to provide assistance and/or to bounce around ideas. There will also be coffee, pizza, and various snacks to keep the energy up. Feel free to drop in for the whole day or just for an hour!

    Anyone – graduate students, faculty, undergraduates, staff – is welcome to join us for this co-working day.

    Digital humanities / digital scholarship experts who will be available are: 

    • Kristen Mapes, Digital Humanities Coordinator, College of Arts and Letters
    • Marco Seiferle-Valencia, Digital Scholarship Outreach Librarian
    • Devin Higgins, Digital Library Programmer
    • Scout Calvert, Data Librarian
  • Endangered Data Week Comes to MSU

    Endangered Data Week Comes to MSU

    When data and open information are under threat, who’ll come to knowledge’s aid? Spartans Will. MSU Library is pleased to partner with Endangered Data Week to offer an exciting week’s worth of programming all about endangered data. Our sessions will cover what types of data are imperiled and equip you with practical skills to join efforts to preserve and ensure access to data. Our broad range of sessions will cover everything from creating your own metadata schemas, building digital communities, working with census data, and letting your representatives know how you feel about the unprecedented removal of information from government websites.

    Keep an eye on this space – more events may be added!

    Events:

    Census Data: Access, Importance, and the Future
    Date & Local Time: 2017-04-17 12:00:00 PM
    Location: Beaumont West Instruction Room (Main Library: 2 West)
    Website:http://bookings.lib.msu.edu/event/3238139
    Census data provides some of the best longitudinal demographic data available and is used by a wide range of disciplines and research. In this workshop you will learn about how census data is collected and structured, how to access it from a variety of sources, why the census is important and what changes may be coming for census data in current proposed legislation.

    Letter Writing Event – Write and Bite Back
    Date & Local Time: 2017-04-18 12:00:00 PM
    Location: Michigan State University | LEADR – 112 Old Horticulture
    Website:http://digitalhumanities.msu.edu/event/write-and-bite-back/
    Spend your lunch break advocating for better data collection policies and for better access to government data!

    A few recent topics to discuss:

    • Environmental Protection Agency was allegedly ordered to remove climate change information from its website
    • USDA removed animal welfare data from its website
    • Senate and House of Representatives have both received proposed bills (S.103 and H.R.482) prohibiting funding from being used “to design, build, maintain, utilize, or provide access to a Federal database of geospatial information on community racial disparities or disparities in access to affordable housing.”
    • Lack of mandatory reporting of hate crimes to the FBI
    • Lack of a federal database of officer-involved shootings or citizens killed by police

    Drop by LEADR (112 Old Hort) on Tuesday, April 18 any time between 12:00p and 1:30p to take part. We will provide lunch, space and materials to get in touch with your representatives in Congress, heads of federal departments, and local and state politicians to let them know that you value open government data!

    You Can Dig the Same Hole Twice: The Development of a Metadata Scheme for Archaeological Archives
    Date & Local Time: 2017-04-18 4:00:00 PM
    Location: Michigan State University | REAL Classroom (Main Library: 3 West)
    Website:http://bookings.lib.msu.edu/event/3238164
    Speaker: Jon Frey, Associate Professor, Classical Studies Art History & Visual Culture
    The “digital revolution” in archaeology has brought with it a number of exciting opportunities. From GPS to laser scanners and sophisticated databases, archaeologists can now utilize with relative ease a number of new data collection tools that promise to speed and simplify our research. A somewhat less glamorous but equally important advantage of the digital age concerns our ability to scan and share large quantities of paper-based legacy documents kept in archaeological archives around the world. This presentation reviews some of the challenges faced by a team of researchers here at MSU as they develop a new metadata scheme to as part of the digitization of an excavation archive at the Ohio State University Excavations at Isthmia in Greece.

    Crash Course in Research Data Management
    Date & Local Time: 2017-04-19 9:30:00 AM
    Location: Michigan State University | Library 3W
    Website:http://bookings.lib.msu.edu/event/3266060
    Speaker: Scout Calvert, Data Librarian, MSU Libraries
    Have you ever lost a project file? Been unable to find the most recent version of a document? Suffered hard drive failure or had your laptop stolen? Been unable to open old files? Been told your data management plan wasn’t detailed enough? Forgotten which file was which? Even small research projects can generate enough data and digital material to become confusing and vulnerable to loss. Start your next project (or class) with a plan to keep your project organized and your data safe, from inception until you are ready to share, reuse, or revisit the project whether next month or years from now. This workshop will provide strategies and insights for managing your data for effective collaboration, to meet funder requirements, or to preserve it for reuse or sharing in the future. There will be bagels and coffee provided.

    Overview of High Performance Computing for Data Analysis
    Date & Local Time: 2017-04-19 12 noon – 1:00:00 PM
    Location: Michigan State University | Library 3W
    Website:http://bookings.lib.msu.edu/event/3266387
    This talk describes High Performance Computing (HPC) for a non-expert audience, and how it differs from desktop and cloud computing. This event is part of the Endangered Data Week.

    Safer Online Browsing and Texting Practices Workshop
    Date & Local Time: 2017-04-19 12 6:00 – 7:30 PM
    Location: Michigan State University | The Writing Center, Bessey Hall, Room 300
    Website: http://digitalhumanities.msu.edu/event/workshop-safer-online-browsing-and-texting-practices
    This event is put on by the Michigan Indigena/Chicanx Community Alliance and facilitated by Les Hutchinson. In this workshop, you will 1) learn some basic internet safety practices; 2) discuss changes in internet privacy policies and laws, and 3) give input on planning a future workshop series on safer digital and online practices. There will be free food provided!

    Internet Privacy 101
    Date & Local Time: 2017-05-20 9:30:00 AM
    Location: Michigan State University | Library Beaumont Instruction Room (2 West)
    Website:http://bookings.lib.msu.edu/event/3265913
    In light of recent legislation regarding how our browsing information may be collected by our internet service providers, there has been a lot of talk about internet privacy. If you’re hearing about VPNs, browser tracking, and more, but aren’t sure what concrete steps you can take, this workshop can help. For best results, bring your own laptop and/or phone so you can adjust settings on your own devices. There will be bagels and coffee provided.

    These events are part of the National Endangered Data Week:

    Endangered Data Week is a new, collaborative effort, coordinated across campuses, nonprofits, libraries, citizen science initiatives, and cultural heritage institutions, to shed light on public datasets that are in danger of being deleted, repressed, mishandled, or lost. The week’s events can promote care for endangered collections by: publicizing the availability of datasets; increasing critical engagement with them, including through visualization and analysis; and by encouraging political activism for open data policies and the fostering of data skills through workshops on curation, documentation and discovery, improved access, and preservation.

  • Global DH Symposium (3/16-3/17) – Livestream Info

    Global DH Symposium (3/16-3/17) – Livestream Info

    Join us at the Global Digital Humanities Symposium, in person at the MSU Union, or online via the livestream and at #msuglobaldh

    Follow the livestream at go.cal.msu.edu/globaldh

    Keynote speakers include Padmini Ray Murray (Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology) and Elizabeth LaPensee (Michigan State University). The full program and schedule is available here.

    For more information regarding the 2017 Global Digital Humanities Symposium, go to the website here.

  • Open Consultations in the Library

    Open Consultations in the Library

    Open Consultation is an office-hours type event that occurs every Thursday at 2pm in Make Central (2 West, Main Library). Faculty, students, and staff doing digital projects or work are invited to come brainstorm or get expert assistance. While we encourage you to come bring your work whenever you’re ready, we do have “themes” each week — so check out the schedule if you know you’ll need a particular expertise!

  • Register for a Workshop!

    Register for a Workshop!

    We have some exciting workshops set up for this spring. We hope to see you there!

    Also save the date for the Global Digital Humanities Symposium (msuglobaldh.org) in March.

  • Global DH Symposium: Registration Extended to 3/10 (FREE)

    Global DH Symposium: Registration Extended to 3/10 (FREE)

    Registration, which is free, has been extended to Friday, March 10th for the Global Digital Humanities Symposium on March 16-17.

    Keynote speakers will include Padmini Ray Murray (Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology) and Elizabeth LaPensee (Michigan State University). The the full program and schedule.

    Register for the symposium for free!

    Email dh@msu.edu or tweet using #msuglobaldh with any questions.

    For more information regarding the 2017 Global Digital Humanities Symposium, go to the website here.