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Digital Unwrapping: Homer, Herculaneum, and the Scroll from Ein Gedi
Brent Seales
University of Kentucky -
How to Do Things with 1.65 Billion Words: Spenser and Big Stylometrics
Joe Loewenstein & Anupam Basu
Washington University, St. Louis -
Big Quilt, Big Data: The AIDS Quilt Touch Project
Anne Balsamo
The New School -
Back to the Future: Philology in a Digital World
Martin Mueller
Northwestern University -
Re:Enlightenment
Clifford Siskin NYU
Peter de Bolla Cambridge -
Social Networks and Archival Context: From Research to Cooperative Program
Daniel Pitti
University of Virginia -
The Digging Condition
Jenterey Sayers
University of Victoria -
Plagues, Witches, and War
Bruce Holsinger
University of Virginia -
Cosmopoesis
Ayesha Ramachandran
Yale University -
The Vogue Archive
Chris Meatto
Conde Naste -
Strange Games
Ian Bogost
Georgia Institute of Technology -
Moral Machinery and the Threat of Ehtical Nihilism
Tony Beavers
University of Evansville -
Visualizing the Ties that Bind
Paul McLean
Rutgers University -
Can Mining a Million Books Tell Us Anything New?
Ted Underwood
University of Illinois -
The Lowcountry Digital History Initiative
Mary Battle & John White
College of Charleston -
Philology in a New Key
Jerome McGann
University of Virginia -
Knowledge as Production
Laura Mandell
Texas A&M University -
Better Insights into Linguistic and Cultural Shifts with an Improved Google Books Interface
Mark Davies
Brigham Young University -
How to Compare One Million Images?
Lev Manovich
City University of New York -
Please Step Away from the Screen!
Robert C. Allen
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill -
The Topographic Revolution in the Digital Humanities
John Bonnett
Brock University -
A Tale of Two Ontologies
Colin Allen
Indiana University -
The Future of the Literary Past
Meredith McGill & Andrew Parker
Rutgers University -
From Reading to Social Computing
Alan Liu
University of California, Santa Barbara -
Are You Sure We're Not in Kansas Anymore, Dorothy?
Dan O'Donnell
University of Lethbridge -
Modeling Turn-Taking Behavior in Spoken Dialouge Systems
Julia Hirschberg
Columbia University -
Collaboration & Dissent
Julia Flanders
Northeastern University -
The Book as Computer
Peter Stallybrass
University of Pennsylvania -
Humanities Scholarship, Cyberinfrastructure & the Future of Cultural Memory Organizations
Clifford Lynch
University of California, Berkeley -
Architecting Cultural Spaces
John Tolva
IBM -
How Not to Read a Million Books
John Unsworth
Brandeis University
Center forDigital Humanities
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Future Knowledge Archive
Established in 2008, Future Knowledge: Prospects for a Digital Era was a lecture series dedicated to bringing a veritable who's who in the Digital Humanities to USC. Held two to three times a semester, the series was a public event that offered insight into a range of issues presented by prominent scholars in the field. Information about many of the lectures is archived below. While the Future Knowledge Series has been temporarily suspended, CDH hopes to bring it back in the coming years.