DHARTI Twitter Conference 2020

#DHARTITwitterConf 2020: Innovating for DH in India

Call for Papers

Schedule

Date: 19 January 2020
Venue: https://twitter.com/hashtag/DHARTITwitterConf?src=hash
All times in India Standard Time (UTC + 530)

9:00 AM
Introduction

9:05 AM
Keynote
What is DH and Why Are So Many People Teaching It?
Brian Croxall (@briancroxall)
Assistant Research Professor of Digital Humanities
Office of Digital Humanities,  Brigham Young University

and

Diane Jakacki (@DianeJakacki)
Digital Scholarship Coordinator and Associated Faculty in Comparative Humanities
Bucknell University

9:50 AM
Opening Remarks
Nirmala Menon (@NMenon05), President, DHARTI, IIT Indore
Dibyadyuti Roy (@dibsroy86), Vice President, DHARTI, IIM Indore

10:00 AM
Let’s spin some yarn: South Asian Migrant Histories interwoven in Digitally Domestic Hashtag Publics
Radhika Gajjala (@cyberdivalivesl)
Bowling Green State University

10:20 AM
Multilingual DH
Quinn Dombrowski (@quinnanya)
Stanford University

11:00 AM
Digitising our vote
Shashikala Assella (@ShashiAssella)
Department of English, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka

11:20 AM

Role of Spatial and Temporal Visualization in Digital Humanities: A Case Study
Navreet Kaur (@navreet2601)
JIRICO, O P Jindal Global University

11:40 AM
Young Adults and Digital Cultures: A Study of Online Affinity Spaces
Zahra Rizvi (@zaaraofthesea)
Dept. of English, Jamia Millia Islamia

12:00 PM
Literary Histories, Digital Futures
Swati Moitra (@swatiatrest)
Gurudas College, University of Calcutta

12:20 PM
Geospatial Digital Humanities in the History Classroom
Swati Chawla (@ChawlaSwati)
Jindal School of Liberal Arts and Humanities, O.P. Jindal Global University

12:40 PM
Indian Community Cookbooks
Muskaan Pal, Ananya Pujary and Khushi Gupta (@CookbooksIndian)
FLAME University

01:00 PM
“Doing” Digital Humanities: Feminist Digital Activism as Pedagogical Practice
Riddhima Sharma (@riddhima_rs)
Bowling Green State University

 

1:40 PM
Cripping the DH Space
Subhradeep Chatterjee (@subhradeepch)
Jadavpur University

2:00 PM
Digital Humanities Pedagogy for Whom?
Kush Patel (@kshpatel)
Avani Institute of Design, Calicut, Kerala

2:20 PM
Indian Classrooms and Digital Humanities
Ankita Mathur (@1810ankita)
Symbiosis School of Liberal Arts

2:40 PM
Interrogating the Ethics of Archival Practices in the Indian Subcontinent
Tamalika Roy (@tamalikar_)
Jadavpur University

3:00 PM
How the Digital Culture is Shaping Today’s Development Practice?
Anuj Ghanekar (@AnujMetta)
Urban Health and Climate Resilience Centre of Excellence

3:20 PM
Visual communication through Digital Comics
Debanjana Nayek (@debanjana_nayek)
Presidency University

3:40 PM
Keynote
Challenging Applied Humanities: Boosting Social Innovation in and for India
Eveline Wandl-Vogt (@caissarl)
Austrian Academy of Sciences

4:20 PM
Closing remarks
Maya Dodd (@mayadodd), Member, DHARTI Executive, FLAME University

How to follow a Twitter Conference?

  1. Each presentation is assigned a 20-minute window. This allows for a 10-15 minute presentation and a     5-10 minute question and answer session.
  2. Presentations are delivered as a thread of tweets.
  3. You do not need a Twitter account to follow the conference. You just need to follow the conference hashtag – #DHARTITwitterConf
  4. If you want to ask a question or comment on a presentation you would need a Twitter account. Just post a Tweet using the conference hashtag. As a courtesy to the presenter please comment only during when the question and answer session for a particular paper is on.
  5. Include our hashtag     (#DHARTITwitterConf) in each of your conference related tweets. This way, it will be easier for others to follow along with the conference.
  6. To make sure that your hashtags are accessible, be sure to capitalize the first letter of each new word. For example, instead of #dhartiwitterconf, use     #DHARTITwitterConf.
  7. You can include images, gifs, and/or screenshots in your tweets, if you like.