The Digital Scholarship Center (DSC) supports and advances the UO's teaching, learning, and research in the digital humanities and digital social sciences, by providing access to an array of academic/library technology services and resources, and by creating a focused collective of faculty experts using digital methods and technology to transform their work. The DSC is located in and administered by the UO Libraries, in partnership with multiple stakeholders and a Council of faculty advisors.
DSC Faculty Fellow,
Professor Heidi Kaufman
Heidi Kaufman is Associate Professor of English at UO. She teaches courses in the Victorian novel, Digital Humanities, and Jewish writers. She has worked with faculty across campus to build a new minor in Digital Humanities which launches in Fall 2017. She is eager to collaborate with colleagues in the library to expand Digital Humanities at UO. To learn more about DH at UO please visit the DH site.
DSC Faculty Fellow,
Professor Ryan Light
Dr. Ryan Light is Associate Professor of Sociology at the UO. He teaches classes on the sociology of culture, social theory, social networks, and research methods. His research focuses on social connectivity and social structure. To this end, he uses tools from social network analysis and computational social science to examine inequality and cultural processes.
What are the Digital Humanities?
— Laura Mandell
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— Kiyonori Nagasaki
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— Jacqueline Wernimont
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— Jennifer Guiliano
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— Lauren Klein
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— Claire Lynch
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— Hugh Cayless
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— Erin Snyder
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— Raffaele Viglianti
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— Laurie N. Taylor
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— Jean Bauer
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— Michael Widner
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— Natasha Martin
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— David N. Wright
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Caribbean Women Healers is a collaborative research project developed and lead by Professor Ana-Maurine Lara (Anthropology) and Professor Alaí Reyes Santos (Ethnic Studies). Since 2016 they have conducted ethnographic research with women healers in the Caribbean and the quickly expanding Caribbean diaspora in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. Sponsored by UO Libraries Digital Scholarship Center's Faculty Grants Program. Keep up with how the project is being built via the Digital Scholarship project team website.
The March is a digital exhibition about James Blue’s documentary film on the 1963 March on Washington. Users can explore the film’s history and meaning through archival documents, interviews, Oval Office recordings, and more. The March was led by Professor David A. Frank and co-sponsored by the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art and University of Oregon Libraries, with generous support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. View the project summary.