Marisa Parham: "Black Glitch in the Hour of Chaos"
Apr 17, 2017, 1:49 PM
A video of Marisa Parham's talk "Black Glitch in the Hour of Chaos," delivered Fall 2016 at Indiana University-Bloomington.
A video of Marisa Parham's talk "Black Glitch in the Hour of Chaos," delivered Fall 2016 at Indiana University-Bloomington.
The Twine workshop provided a hands-on tutorial for Twine, as well as a presentation on ways the platform can be used to represent highly-charged data.
IDAH's Annual Workshop, presented by Dr. Tanya Clement.
Some example maps for mapping timelines, multiple trajectories, and affect, collected to support IDAH's Rewiring Consent programming.
A step-by-step Story Maps tutorial created by Theresa Quill, Social Sciences Librarian at Indiana University Bloomington.
The new journal "Studies in Digital Heritage" is an online, peer-reviewed, open access journal for scholars in cultural heritage fields.
Announcing IDAH's Spring 2017 programming: Rewiring Consent
Ruth M. Stone, past IDAH Director, shares her memories of IDAH Associate Director Clara Henderson.
IDAH hosted Dr. Marisa Parham for her talk "Black Glitch in the Hour of Chaos" in November, 2016
Courses offered by Indiana University-Bloomington related to the Digital Humanities, for Spring 2017.
Scott Weingart, a Digital Humanities Specialist at Carnegie Mellon University and a 2011-12 HASTAC Scholar, wrote an excellent introduction to topic modeling for digital humanists on his blog back in 2012.
This graduate course introduces the work of the digital humanities, entering that multidisciplinary big tent through the doorway marked for folklore studies and for neighboring disciplines such as ethnology and ethnomusicology. Emphasizing hands-on projects and active learning, the course will…
Most live electronic music today is performed by one or two people, but what happens if you have more people playing together? In the last decade, a new form of electronic music-making has emerged: the laptop orchestra, in which multiple laptop computer musicians perform together. This course is for…
Arlene Díaz is an Associate Professor of History at Indiana University, Bloomington and a 2015-2016 faculty fellow at the Institute for Digital Arts and Humanities, through her collaboration with IDAH on a Collaborative Research and Creative Activity Funding (CRCAF) grant. Her current research…