Monthly Archives: December 2004

The Cultural Studies E-archive Project

Digitize This: The Cultural Studies E.Archive Project. A couple of years ago I placed a challenge for Cultural Studies to engage more whole-heartedly with the technlogies that they critique. The result is the E Archive Project (see article by Gary Hall) My challenge to those that use Derrida or Bey or Adorno or Bourdieu within [...]

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The Role of Coopertation in History

HUM 202 — Toward a Literacy of Cooperation This link was sent by Andrew Garton of Toysatellite. It concerns a lecture series at Stanford University about the history of cooperation (as apposed to ‘Darwins blind spot’ being his theory of natural selection). It proposes that the history of evolution overlooks the history of coopertaion (and [...]

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Hypertext sites…

http://julia1926.net/ Johannes Weymann (about a woman with Alzheimers (thanks to jill/txt) Stuart Maulthrop: Reagan Library (I think the title is ironic). http://iat.ubalt.edu/moulthrop/hypertexts/rl/pages/intro.htm

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CFP Journal Aggregation Site

Call for Papers – Largest listing of call for papers in all areas of specialization I’ve been looking for this Journal Call For Papers Aggregetion site for quite some time. I am not sure if there are others, but this one looks OK and has a modest subscription charge.

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Third Internetional Conference on New Directions in the Humanities 2005

(This conference in August of next year (and organised by Australians) has plenty of room to discuss New Media in the Humanities). Humanities Conference 2005 Third International Conference on New Directions in the Humanities Location Homerton College, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK Event Starts On August 2, 2005 Event Ends On August 5, 2005 Language [...]

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Organised Networks II

(Here is my suggestions on how to organsise a network like Fibreculture. It is best to organise an email list first then worry about taking over the world later). 1) Incorporate as a legal entity. Become a fully independent body that is not dependent on any institution (including universities) for its survival. If need be, [...]

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Organised Networks

(I am not really sure what this is saying. I really don’t think it is saying anything. It is meant to be about an email discussion list called fiberculture that has 800 subscribers. But I think it is about something else). Dawn of the Organized Networks [excerpt of a beta version] By Ned Rossiter & [...]

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  • ...this blog is obsessively directed at profiling digital humanities developments in a cultural, social, and technical sense and in terms of books and applications...it is an aggregation or 'meta' style blog with the occasional commentary

    Hi, my name is Dr Craig Bellamy and I am a digital humanities analyst for the Victorian eResearch Strategic Initiative, a consortium based at the University of Melbourne, however, the views expressed in this blog are the responsibility of the author alone.

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