The pull of academia carves a pathway for digital humanities prof
Emily Murphy embraces the constant change of technology, empowering students to think imaginatively. In her research, Murphy pursues ideas through technologies such as linked data, looking at how we can describe culture and the relationships between entities — people, places, things, or events.
Technology, Culture, and Education Unconference
Conference welcomes participants from the Okanagan technology, culture, and education communities for informal, participant-driven events that facilitate peer-to-peer learning and collaboration.
UBC, Exeter collaborate in the study of digital humanities
Collaboration will enhance learning opportunities for students
Constance Crompton receives grant for LGLC project
Digital resource will allow users to explore the history of gay liberation in Canada between 1964 and 1981.
Decades-old documents to be transformed into easily sharable digital data
Crompton’s research project, titled “The Exchange: A Humanist Data Lab,” joins the past with the present through digitization.
Digital Editions Launch
Students examine the intersection between Children’s Literature and Digital Humanities