Category: Digital Posters

  • Archiving BUNI (Bucknell in Northern Ireland)

    Carl Milofsky and Brianna Derr (Bucknell University) This poster presents the Bucknell University Northern Ireland Archive (also here), which makes available video and analytic notes from the Bucknell in Northern Ireland Program. This is a three-week, study-abroad program based in Derry/Londonderry, Northern Ireland. More than 120 hours of tapes were recorded between 2002 and 2005. They include…

  • Stories of the Susquehanna Documentary Series

    John LaLoggia and Laura Lujan (Bucknell University) The Stories of the Susquehanna Documentary Series is a public history project in which Bucknell University students discover and unfold the stories of Susquehanna River Valley communities in a 26-minute documentary film. The first documentary in the series, “Utopian Dreams,” will be broadcast by public television station, WVIA.…

  • Designing Digital Scholarship: Visual Interface Prototyping Strategies for Scholarship Beyond the Printed Page

    Amy Papaelias (State University of New York at New Paltz) How can undergraduate studies in graphic design prepare students for engagement in public scholarship and the digital humanities? As part of a Summer Undergraduate Research Experience (SURE) at SUNY New Paltz, BFA graphic design major Megan Doty collaborated with Assistant Professor of Graphic Design Amy…

  • Cinemablography

    Mark Young and Anthony Watkins (Messiah College) From an ordinary stack of ungraded film analysis papers was born an idea: what if, instead of just writing about film production theory, students could collaborate to demonstrate what they had learned by turning papers into films? Cinemablography is the Messiah College Communication Department’s experimental answer to this question.…

  • Global Crossroads: Designing an Open Research Platform

    Christopher Gilman and Carey Sargent (Occidental College) Occidental College’s Global Crossroads is a custom designed web application and two-story media installation that allows students and faculty to create and display multimedia projects. The design of the web app is oriented toward iterative, open research process, the construction of academic argumentation, and interactive sharing and annotation…

  • Encoding Maggie: Serendipity and Scholarship

    Alyssa Russell and Kathryn Tomasek (Wheaton College) In summer 2015, Russell and Tomasek collaborated on two projects that use the Guidelines of the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI). Tomasek’s longstanding project featuring account books offered the initial focus for the research, and the method employed to introduce Russell to the TEI Guidelines offered her an unexpected…

  • Fallingwater Digital: How One of the World’s Greatest Houses, Digital tools, and Collaboration Created Powerful Student Engagement

    Janice Mann (Bucknell University) In the spring semester of 2015 I offered a project-based course focused on Frank Lloyd Wright’s celebrated Fallingwater, built in the Laurel Highlands about 40 miles away from Pittsburg for department store magnate Edgar Kaufmann in 1935. Although the class used Falllingwater as a point of departure, it was interdisciplinary in…

  • Visualizing the Poetry of Michael Field

    Sarah Kersh, Kathleen Jarman, and Georgia Christman (Dickinson College) During the summer of 2015, the Mellon Foundation Digital Humanities grant at Dickinson College, funded a project to produce an online, annotated edition of a volume of poems written by Michael Field and entitled Sight and Song (1892). “Michael Field” is actually the pseudonym of two…

  • Visualizing Networks in the Ancient Mediterranean

    Thomas Beasley and Suné Swart (Bucknell University) In this project demo, we will share Visualizing Networks in the Ancient Mediterranean (VNAM), a web-based application for generating dynamic visualizations of all varieties of networks in the ancient world and exposing the primary evidence on which they are based. VNAM makes it possible to see and explore,…

  • Creating a Digital Environment for Engaging Students, Teachers, and Researchers in Medieval Literature

    Michael McGuire and Olga Scrivner (Indiana University) Medieval literature in the digital community is in general underrepresented and when available often exists in less interactive and useable forms such as raw archived images. This is especially problematic for less commonly studied languages where fewer people are able to read and interpret the original text. Although…

  • Tempo of the Times

    Benjamin Draves and Vincent Demarco (Lafayette College) Tempo of the Times looks to connect social shifts with fundamental changes in musical compositions. Powered by the Echo Nest, this project uses macroeconomic metrics and musical metrics that vary in sophistication in an attempt understand how artist’s work change with respect to the societal climate. Strong correlations…

  • Making the Process Public: Collaboration, Performance Pedagogy, and Digital Director’s Books

    Anjalee Deshpande Hutchinson (Bucknell University) Where are the intersections between digital scholarship and live performance pedagogy? Can digitizing some of the craft and process of theatre making offer opportunities for collaboration that can exceed what we have done in the past? Join Anjalee Deshpande Hutchinson as she details how digital literacy can be taught hand…

  • Coincidental Collaborations: Bridging Communities of Practice on the Liberal Arts Campus

    Stephen Flynn, William Rial, and Sofia Visa (College of Wooster) This presentation offers perspectives from the College of Wooster’s Computer Science and Library faculties on the development of a project that will ultimately result in digital editions of Madeleine de Scudéry’s series of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century _Conversations_. French Professor Laura Burch, after teaching from PDF…

  • Friendship and Diversity: Philosophical and Geographical Considerations

    Sheila Lintott and Melissa Eng (Bucknell University) Employing an interdisciplinary approach involving philosophy and geography, we are investigating diversity in friendship given the claim that friendship is circumstantial. We begin our study by distributing a three-part survey to students at Bucknell University in order to gather a variety of data types. The quantitative web-based questionnaire aims to…