Archive for the ‘Friends and Family’Category

The (Alleged) Death of Privacy

The final installment in the “What does digital scholarship do?” HASTAC Scholars series at the University of Washington is scheduled for tomorrow on the Seattle campus.

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Computers & Writing 2010

This coming week (from May 20th to the 23rd), I’ll be attending my third Computers and Writing conference, this year at Purdue University.  (The last two I attended were at Wayne State and UC-Davis.)

I’ll be involved in a few conference invents, including a Friday panel titled, “Tinkering with Rhetorical Expertise: Reappraising Functional Literacy,” with Derek Van Ittersum, Annette Vee, and Kory Lawson Ching.  Here’s a quick description of what we’ll be discussing:

This panel responds to efforts in the field to rearticulate functional literacy by turning to the trope of tinkering.  Rather than imagining tinkering as mending an imperfect text, we instead seek to reframe tinkering to focus on the experimental or clever solutions to technological and rhetorical questions.

I’m really looking forward to it, especially since I’ll be in most brill company.  During my portion of the panel, I’ll be speaking to the roles that code, prototyping, and making stuff might play in computers and comp.

On Sunday, with six other folks I’m also contributing to the conference’s final town hall, “Articulating New Configurations for Virtual Scholarship.”  Michael J. Salvo is moderating:

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Story in Perspectives

A big thanks to Rebecca Collins for her story in the new issue of Perspectives, the UW’s College of Arts & Sciences newsletter.

Also a big thanks to Fiona Barnett (Women’s Studies, Duke) and Herb Blau (English and Comp Lit., UW) for their kind and supportive words.

Check out the story.

Engaging the Networked Domestic

Good news!  The next installment in the “What does digital scholarship do?” HASTAC Scholars series at the University of Washington is scheduled for this week.

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Teaching & Learning through DH

A piece, titled “Teaching and Learning through the Digital Humanities,” that I wrote for English Matters (the UW English Department’s newsletter) is now online.

Give it a gander.  There are also some print versions finding their way into the mailboxes of alumni.

A big thanks to Jen Gonyer-Donohue for being a fantastic editor and conversationalist.

THATCamp PNW 2010 @ the UW Seattle

I’m happy to announce that my UW English colleague, Paige Morgan, and I recently finished the THATCamp PNW website, including a Call for Participants for the October 2010 event, which will be held on the University of Washington’s Seattle campus.

A big thanks to Julie Meloni for all of her help.

The call’s copied below, and you can visit the site for more info.  If you are interested in applying, then please note the deadline.  Thanks!

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