
Today I am embarking on a crazy eleven days. This week I am attending the International Digital Humanities Conference at the University of Western Sydney. When that ends on Friday, I then head to the State Library of NSW for the weekend of the GovHack competition. Iโll be there throughout the weekend extracting a variety datasets about World War I as part of a team which will produce something online which will help people gain greater insights into an aspect of the history of the War. Then on Monday 6th July the annual Australian Historical Association conference commences. I am delivering a paper at this conference.
Digital Humanities is an emerging discipline about the use of technology in humanities research. GovHack is an annual competition where Australian governments, and this year New Zealand, encourage people to use government datasets, merge them, filter them, visualise them and generally be creative with them in order to find new insights and help people to connect with this information. The WWIHack is part of the GovHack competition this year. Cultural institutions from around Australia and New Zealand are making available datasets about World War One available for the competition. All datasets are freely available for anyone to use, so even if you are not entering these competitions you can also have a look at them and see what you can make of them.
I am exhausted thinking about it, but in these two weeks I will learn so much that will be useful for my work. As well as an important learning opportunity these events will recharge my enthusiasm for my book and make me look at it in a new light.
I will be sharing my experience of these activities through blog posts and tweets. These are the hashtags I will be using on Twitter (@perkinsy) over the next couple of weeks:
- #dh2015 โ International Digital Humanities Conference
- #WWIHack โ World War One Hack competition which is part of the annual GovHack competition (#GovHack)
- #OzHA2015 โ Australian Historical Association conference
I realised I had not explained what digital humanities and GovHack were when I wrote this late last night so I quickly added an explanatory paragraph this morning.
My maximum concentration span at any conference, even a well organised and exciting one, is 3 full days (9am-6pm). After that, my mind begins to wander.
You are going to have an INSANE 11 days! But the Australian Historical Association conference is always excellent. Have a nice glass of wine in the evenings ๐
Insane is the right word! I am usually totally spent after a 5 day Australian Historical Association conference and spend a day in bed reading. However, I am taking great care to pace myself. No conference dinners or receptions.
I had at the ‘Introduction to Digital Manuscript Studies‘ workshop yesterday. We are learning the basics of how to transcribe a manuscript using TEI markup so that it can be rendered well on a website. Last night I worked on transcribing and marking up my own historical document and exploring the potential of this world.
What’s TEI stand for? And it sounds like a wonderfully exciting 11 days – kia kaha (be strong) and take time to recover afterwards, but most of all, enjoy!
TEI = Text Encoding Initiative. It is a systematic vocabulary for encoding documents used in the humanities and social sciences which enables them to be rendered into effective web pages. If you are interested you can read about my experience of this workshop on my digital humanities blog, Stumbling Through the Future
Thanks for the good wishes ๐
Thanks for that. And yes, I’ll check out your other blog – you’re quite prolific!