(Politics of) Digital Humanities in Eastern European Studies

(Politics of) Digital Humanities in Eastern European Studies

Organizer
Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe; Aleksanteri Institute, University of Helsinki
Venue
Aleksanteri Institute, Unioninkatu 33, Helsinki
Location
Helsinki
Country
Finland
From - Until
10.09.2018 - 11.09.2018
Website
By
Eszter Gantner

Discourses about the essence of Digital Humanities (DH) became very frequent in the last decade. While digital mega-projects increasingly attract large research funding both on national and on European level, a large number of questions regarding the added value of DH tools, the robustness of methodological approaches and vulnerabilities of infrastructure remain open. This workshop – the fi rst of a series on the challenges of DH in Europe, with a special focus on Eastern Europe – takes up a challenge to refl ect on ‘digital turn’ in the context of area studies. In doing so, this event formulates questions on concrete strategies, policies and main actors shaping and constructing this field.

Organization and Concept by Eszter Gantner, Daria Gritsenko

Programm

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10

12:45-1:00 pm INTRODUCTION
Markku Kangaspuro (AI), Peter Haslinger (HI) and Daria Gritsenko (AI)
1:00-1:30 pm IMPULSE LECTURE
Peter Haslinger (Herder Institute):
National Epistemologies, Cultural Heritage, and Memory Politics in a Digital Age

1:30-2:00 pm Discussion
2:00-2:15 pm Coffee break

2:15-3:15 pm PANEL I: USING AND RE-USING HISTORY
Alexey Kouprianov (HSE, St. Petersburg):
Geographical mobility of University professors in the Russian Empire: Domain structure of the network and the mobility paradox resolved by the analysis of the Russian University Professors Career Database
Jaromir Mrnka (ISTR, Prague):
Making of the Historical Knowledge. Digitization in the State Security Archives in the Czech Republic

3:15-3.30 pm Coffee break

3:30-4:00 pm IMPULSE LECTURE
Stefan Trajković Filipović (Justus Liebig University Giessen):
Presentation, Preservation and Public Appeal: Digitizing Heritage in
Contemporary Serbia

4:00-4:30 pm Discussion

4:30-5:30 pm PANEL II: HERITAGE AND CULTURE THROUGH THE LENS
Anastasia Bonch-Osmalovskaya (HSE, Moscow):
Computational linguistics and digital humanities
Mila Oiva (University of Turku):
Economy Talk and Advertising. Digital Reading of the Polish newspaper “Zycie Gospodarcze”, 1950-1980

7:00 pm Dinner

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11

9:00-9:30 am IMPULSE LECTURE
Elisabeta Gaufmann (University of Bremen):
Kremlin Trolls: Assessing the Impact of Bots in Russian Security Discourse
9:30-10:00 am Discussion

10:00-11:00 am PANEL III: E-SECURITY, SURVEILLANCE AND POWER
Nadya Trach (Justus Liebig University Giessen):
Bloggers as Social Actors in Language Policies Debates in Contemporary Ukraine
Felix Herrmann (University of Bremen):
Discuss Data: Designing a Platform for the Interactive Discussion of Research Data. Quality for the Area Studies on the post-Soviet region

11:00-11:15 am Coffee break

11:15 am -12:45 pm ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
Digital Archives in Russia with Marianna Murvyeva (University of Helsinki), Micha Melnichenko (HSE, Moscow), Sofia Gavrilova (HSE, Moscow)
12:45-1:00 pm Coffee break

1:00-2:00 pm FINAL PLENUM AND WRAP UP
Markku Kangaspuro, Peter Haslinger, Daria Gritsenko

Contact (announcement)

Eszter Gantner

eszter.gantner@herder-institut.de


Editors Information
Published on
Classification
Temporal Classification
Regional Classification
Subject - Topic
Additional Informations
Country Event
Language(s) of event
English
Language of announcement