Lisa Spiro (Rice University) has written a post recapping her experience at the Arclight Symposium at Concordia University, an event which “brought together film and media historians with digital humanists to explore the possibilities and pitfalls of digital methods for media history.”
In “Exploring Digital Humanities and Media History,” Spiro details the core principles, challenges, and approaches that were present at the symposium, along with links to projects and related research.
.@DHandLib POST: Exploring Digital Humanities and Media History, Roxanne Shirazi http://t.co/0Enf6OxDVP
RT @DHandLib: POST: Exploring Digital Humanities and Media History ← dh+lib http://t.co/96Gg5kzOdl #arclight2015 @lisaspiro @ProjArclight
RT @DHandLib: POST: Exploring Digital Humanities and Media History ← dh+lib http://t.co/96Gg5kzOdl #arclight2015 @lisaspiro @ProjArclight
RT @DHandLib: POST: Exploring Digital Humanities and Media History ← dh+lib http://t.co/96Gg5kzOdl #arclight2015 @lisaspiro @ProjArclight
RT @DHandLib: POST: Exploring Digital Humanities and Media History ← dh+lib http://t.co/96Gg5kzOdl #arclight2015 @lisaspiro @ProjArclight
POST: Exploring Digital Humanities and Media History ← dh+lib http://t.co/nheJwslql9
RT @DHandLib: POST: Exploring Digital Humanities and Media History ← dh+lib http://t.co/96Gg5kzOdl #arclight2015 @lisaspiro @ProjArclight