Call for papers 17th EASA Biennial Conference (Belfast, 26-29 July 2022) Panel P028
Dear Colleagues,
Please consider subnitting a paper to EASA 2022 panel P028:
Convenors:
Dear Colleagues,
Please consider subnitting a paper to EASA 2022 panel P028:
Convenors:
Following the pandemic, educational institutes across the world hastened to adopt, adapt and cope with digital learning. The eagerness in their intent to ramp up the technological infrastructures, however, does not refect when it comes rethinking or redesigning pedagogies for digital learning. Such technocratic ambitions often have very little, if anything, to do with pedagogy, as such. This panel dwells on the diminishing scope of discussing pedagogy of and for digital learning.
Panelists:
Rohan D' Souza - Kyoto University
Call for contributions
Archiving activism in the digital age
edited by Ann Rigney (Utrecht University) and Daniele Salerno (Utrecht University)
Panel Discussion
New Evidence for Recovering Histories and Texts
Considering texts broadly as documentary, artistic, visual, aural, textile, performed, or inhabited, what new kinds and uses of evidence are recovering histories through texts? We especially invite underrepresented or interdisciplinary scholarship.
IEG Fellowship - Digital Humanities
The Afro and Indigenous Futures speaker series, organized by The New School's Liberal Studies Student Association, is thrilled to announce the online lecture "Interfaces for the Earthverse," with Ecuadorian artist Oscar Santillán on March 24, 2022 at 12:00 PM ET. The artist will engage with the notion of ‘decentralized cognition’, which has been vital to his artistic practice. It proposes that intelligence can emerge from infinite configurations; it is not the sole product of centralized brains.
This conference will bring together an international group of scholars who have worked on Princeton’s FLAME project, as well as leading scholars on the late antique and early medieval economy worldwide. Over three days, speakers will present new findings centered on the research priorities of the FLAME project. Participants will share insights on economic, political, and social changes throughout this period, but will also reflect upon the historiographical and methodological problems posed by the project itself.
Join us for the University College Dublin Humanities Institute's annual PhD conference. This year's event will focus on the symbolic vehicle of the threshold.
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