Digital.Humanities @ Oxford Summer School 2013

*Only nine days left to book!*

Places for this year’s Digital.Humanities @ Oxford Summer School
are filling up already, so book your place soon! Visit
http://digital.humanities.ox.ac.uk/dhoxss/2013/ for more information.

If you are awaiting the results of local funding and want to to
see whether your chosen workshop is almost full, email
courses@it.ox.ac.uk to find out!

====
The Digital.Humanities @ Oxford Summer School (DHOxSS) is an
annual event for anyone working in the Digital Humanities. This
year’s Summer School will be held on 8 – 12 July, at the
University of Oxford. If you are a researcher, project manager,
research assistant, or student of the Humanities, this is an
opportunity for you to learn about the tools and methodology of
digital humanities, and to make contact with others in your
field. You will be introduced to topics spanning from creating,
managing, analysing, modelling, visualizing, to publication of
digital data for the Humanities. Visit
http://digital.humanities.ox.ac.uk/dhoxss/2013/ for more information.

With the DHOxSS’s customisable schedule, you book on one of our
five-day workshops, and supplement this by booking several guest
lectures from experts in their fields.

The main five-day training workshops this year are:

1. Cultural Connections: exchanging knowledge and widening
participation in the Humanities
2. How to do Digital Humanities: Discovery, Analysis and
Collaboration
3. A Humanities Web of Data: publishing, linking and querying on
the semantic web.
4. An Introduction to XML and the Text Encoding Initiative
5. An Introduction to XSLT for Digital Humanists

There are a variety of evening events including a peer-reviewed
poster session to give delegates a chance to demonstrate their
work to the other delegates and speakers. The Thursday evening
sees an elegant drinks reception and three-course banquet at
historic Queen’s College, Oxford! (Well worth it!)

DHOxSS is a collaboration for Digital.Humanities @ Oxford between
the University of Oxford’s IT Services, the Oxford e-Research
Centre (OeRC), the Bodleian Libraries, and The Oxford Research
Centre in the Humanities.

If you have questions, then email us at courses@it.ox.ac.uk for
answers.
More details at: http://digital.humanities.ox.ac.uk/dhoxss/2013/