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schedule and do publicity for Erin Cozzens workshop #28

Closed rcrath closed 9 years ago

rcrath commented 9 years ago

Need bio, description, pic. tentative date: Monday April 6 12-1:15 Have to

  1. schedule time: Erin Confirmed. Monday, April 6, 12-1:15 in the history library.
  2. do blog entry
  3. put on calendar
  4. announce through email list
  5. traditional publicity. department emails, flyer.

Erin will provide bio, desc, pic for David, as per email.

rcrath commented 9 years ago

Erin confirmed for 4/6 and will send materials to @damg70. main entry updated to reflect.

rcrath commented 9 years ago

@damg70 could you do the ppublicity for this this week?

damg70 commented 9 years ago

Aye.

:david

I'm all thumbs over here.

On Mar 22, 2015, at 3:27 PM, rcrath notifications@github.com wrote:

@damg70 could you do the ppublicity for this this week?

— Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub.

rcrath commented 9 years ago

@damg, here is the info for the publicity. You do the event calendar and blog post? Can we put a flyer together for this one? History dept. people will want to know I think. COzzens image is here

Cozens Bio

Erin Cozens earned her B.A. from Wellesley College and her M.A./M.S.L.I.S. from Simmons College before earning her doctorate in Pacific History from the University of Hawai‘i in 2011. Her dissertation focused on gender and colonialism in nineteenth-century Aotearoa/New Zealand. After completing her degree, she took a position with the Office of the Historian at the U.S. Department of State, where she helps to compile, edit, and publish (both in print and digitally) the Foreign Relations of the United States series. She has also continued her scholarly research, and has articles forthcoming in both The Journal of World History and The Journal of the History of Sexuality.

Presentation Title “Documentary Editing in the Age of Digital Humanities”

Presentation Abstract

The field of Digital Humanities has transformed the way scholars of history and other humanities disciplines approach research of, access to, and manipulation of data. The use of technologies such as XML and the TEI have allowed for much more robust engagement with large sets of humanities driven data, and is continuing to shape the way we think about the intersection of humanities content and technology. By describing the ways the Office of the Historian at the U.S. Department of State has engaged with the DH field—including training with the Women Writers Project, the development of a CMS that allows for fully integrated content across our website, and the creation of a subject-specific taxonomy—this talk hopes to engender a lively discussion of the possibilities and challenges inherent in the ever-evolving field of Digital Humanities.

rcrath commented 9 years ago

Her talk is posted to the blog, here: http://www.hawaii.edu/arthum/digital/?p=635

@damg70 submitted event to the campus events calendar.

Flyer is done, and in "cozen" folder under 2do. Who in the history office should I send it to for printing?

rcrath commented 9 years ago

@damg70, I will send flyer to julie.

rcrath commented 9 years ago

@damg70 write

Her talk is posted to the blog, here: http://www.hawaii.edu/arthum/digital/?p=635 I submitted event to the campus events calendar. Flyer is done, and in "cozen" folder under 2do. Who in the history office should I send it to for printing?

Taken care of. I sent to Julie and also posted to email list. we should probably do another reminder the Sunday before if we think of it.

damg70 commented 9 years ago

I did this as well, as I said I would… but ok.

On Mar 24, 2015, at 2:42 PM, Rich Rath notifications@github.com wrote:

@damg70 https://github.com/damg70, I will send flyer to julie.motooka@hawaii.edu mailto:julie.motooka@hawaii.edu and Sue and close the issue. Thanks.

— Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub https://github.com/digiah/2do/issues/28#issuecomment-85762359.

rcrath commented 9 years ago

@damg70 Oh me of little faith. Sorry.