Digital Humanities Data Curation, a series of three-day workshops, will provide 
a strong introductory grounding in data curation concepts and practices, 
focusing on the special issues and challenges of data curation in the 
humanities. Workshops are aimed at humanities researchers — whether traditional 
faculty or alternative (alt-ac) professionals — as well as librarians, 
archivists, cultural heritage specialists, other information professionals, and 
advanced graduate students.

Applications are now being accepted for the second Digital Humanities Data 
Curation Institute workshop, to be held at the Maryland Institute for 
Technology in the Humanities, University of Maryland, October 16-18, 2013. 
Visit the Institute website (http://dhcuration.org/institute) to complete an 
application by August 7.

As the materials and analytical practices of humanities research become 
increasingly digital, the theoretical knowledge and practical skills of 
information science, librarianship, and archival science — which come together 
in the research, and practice of data curation — will become more vital to 
humanists.

Carrying out computational research with digital materials requires that both 
scholars and information professionals understand how to manage and curate data 
over its entire lifetime of interest. At the least, individual scholars must be 
able to document their data curation strategies and evaluate those of 
collaborators and other purveyors of humanities data. More fully integrating 
data curation into digital research involves fluency with topics such as 
disciplinary research cultures, publication, information sharing, and reward 
practices, descriptive standards, metadata formats, and the technical 
characteristics of digital data.

Organized by the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH), 
the Women Writers Project (WWP) at Brown University, and the Center for 
Informatics Research in Science and Scholarship (CIRSS) at GSLIS, this workshop 
series is generously funded by an Institute for Advanced Topics in the Digital 
Humanities grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Megan Senseney
Center for Informatics Research in Science and Scholarship
Graduate School of Library and Information Science
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Phone: 217-244-5574
Email: [email protected]

Visit the website at http://dhcuration.org/institute

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