Are you close to the East Coast and looking for a great local digital
humanities training opportunity?
Dream Lab <https://web.sas.upenn.edu/dream-lab/> is a week-long digital
humanities training opportunity hosted by the University of
Pennsylvania (*Philadelphia,
June 5-8*) and designed to help humanists become more confident and
thoughtful users, creators, and critics of digital technology. There are
several courses to choose from
<https://web.sas.upenn.edu/dream-lab/courses-2023/>, each of which combines
technology instruction with practical application. Dream Lab is open to
everyone but has been designed especially to serve graduate students and
early-stage scholars aspiring to be teaching faculty, research librarians,
museum professionals, and archivists. Dream Lab is open to all, and is
especially accessible to those within the New England and Mid-Atlantic
regions.
My colleague Lauren Cooper (Center for Black Digital Research, PSU) and I
will again be teaching our course, Nuts and Bolts of DH Project Development
<https://web.sas.upenn.edu/dream-lab/nuts-and-bolts-of-dh-project-development-2023/>.
This course is specifically geared towards librarians and consultants who
support DH projects. Other courses at Dream Lab
<https://web.sas.upenn.edu/dream-lab/courses-2023/> include text analysis,
digital surrogates, humanities mapping, and other topics of interest to
library workers. Please let me know if you have any questions about Dream
Lab or our course.
Early bird (and cheapest registration) is open until *May 19, 2023*.
Stay well,
----
Kayla Abner
(she/her)
*Digital Scholarship Librarian*
Digital Initiatives and Preservation
Library, Museums and Press
University of Delaware
[log in to unmask]
***The **University of Delaware, a land grant institution, is located on
land that was and continues to be vital to the web of life of the Nanticoke
and Lenni-Lenape people. We express gratitude and honor the people who have
inhabited, cultivated, and nourished this land for thousands of years, even
after their attempted forced removal during the colonial era and early
federal period**. The University of Delaware also financially benefitted
from the expropriation of Indigenous territories in the region colonially
known as Montana.*
*Please click here <https://youtu.be/5mNQxHOsenw> for a fuller version of
the University’s Living Land Acknowledgement.***
[image: University of Delaware]
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