Registration for Hilary Term 2022 Digital Tools and Technologies Workshops now open!

The Digital Tools and Technologies workshops for the Hilary Term 2022 are now open for registration.  The workshops will take place every two weeks, running from Weds 16th Feb to Weds 30th March inclusive.  This term, the topics will cover legal and ethical issues in data-scraping, training machines in transcribing Read More …

SAVE THE DATE! Digital Tools and Technologies workshops for Hilary Term 2022

The dates and topics for the Digital Tools and Technologies workshops from the Centre for Digital Humanities are now available.  These workshops will take part in Hilary Term 2022, and continue the Centre’s series of free workshops for the wider DH community within TCD and beyond.

Upcoming webinar – “Realising the Critical Digital Humanities”, 21st May

  Prof. Jennifer Edmond, Director of the Centre for Digital Humanities at TCD, will be speaking about “Realising the Critical Digital Humanities” on 21st May at 1pm (Irish time) as part of the International Webinar series from the Seshadripuram Evening Degree College, Bengaluru, India. The International webinar series is part Read More …

DH@TCD March 2021 Newsletter

With details of the next UK-Ireland Digital Humanities Network event & community survey, registration for the remaining DH@TCD workshops, links to the recent SHAPE-ID webinar on interdisciplinary infrastructure & the DARIAH-EU Annual Event CfP, there is plenty to keep you entertained in March’s DH@TCD Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/1b1268d0c264/dhtcd-march-2021-newsletter

DSS Workshop Four – Scoping DH Projects, Managing Data and Documenting Work

Instructor: Prof. Jennifer Edmond Date: 28th October 2020 Time: 12:00-15:00 In this workshop, Prof Edmond will be introduce key success factors for planning, delivering and closing a digital project.  Participants will learn about best practices in, as well as pragmatic tips and tricks for, such key topics as: building collaborations, Read More …

DSS Workshop Three – Data Visualisation via Geographic Information Systems

Date: 21st October 2020 Time: 12:00-15:00 The ‘spatial turn’ in the humanities in recent years has seen an upswing in the application of tools based on geospatial principles as more humanities scholars turn to software such as GIS to visualise and explore spatial data within their work.  QGIS, a free open-source Read More …