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Center for Digital Scholarship

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Pembroke Record

The CDS has just completed work on the digital archive for the Pembroke Record. From 1922 to 1970, the Pembroke Record documented and commented upon life at Pembroke College in Brown University. Although the Pembroke Record ceased publishing decades ago, it has remained a valuable archival resource and an irreplaceable part of the history of Pembroke Record

Steve Ramsay’s talk

The talk that Steve Ramsay gave at Brown on Friday, April 16 (“The Hermeneutics of Screwing Around”) is posted here. As there were no slides or other demos, the only thing missing is Steve’s inimitable delivery!

John Price Wilkin: The 2010 Brendel Lecture

John Price Wilkin will speak Friday, April 23 at 9:00 AM in the Lownes Room, about how the impending Google Book Settlement and HaithiTrust will allow/force libraries to rethink traditional collection development assumptions. John Wilkin is the Associate University Librarian for Library Information Technology (LIT) at the University of Michigan and is the Executive Director John Price Wilkin: The 2010 Brendel Lecture

CHUG Talk: Steve Ramsay on “The Hermeneutics of Screwing Around”

3:30 PM Friday, April 16 Lownes Room, John Hay library The Hermeneutics of Screwing Around Humanities scholarship, by all accounts, now finds itself in what one prominent center of activity calls “An Age of Abundance.” Prominent scholars are asking “What do we do with a million books?” and suggesting “far reading,” “distant reading,” and even CHUG Talk: Steve Ramsay on “The Hermeneutics of Screwing Around”

Collaboration and Dissent

Podcasts are now available of the Interview and Lecture by Julia Flanders from the Digital Humanities Speaker’s Series, Future Knowledge: Prospects for a Digital Era. University of South Carolina. March 25, 2010. Julia is the Director of the Women Writers Project and Associate Director for Textbase Development here at the Center for Digital Scholarship.

“April is the Cruelest Month…”

What else is there to say about a month that hosts both Tax Day and the assassination of Abraham Lincoln? Drop by the lobby of the John Hay Library to find out. The exhibit features Lincolniana from the Hay Library’s McLellan Lincoln Collection, and constitutes a final farewell to the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial. “April is “April is the Cruelest Month…”

Women in the Archives

Women in the Archives is a one-day colloquium co-sponsored by the Women Writers Project and the Sarah Doyle Women’s Center at Brown University, to be held on April 24, 2010 at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Women in the Archives explores the use of archival materials in the study of women’s writing, and the Women in the Archives