He is the author and co-author of several books, book chapters and articles, as well as one of the creators of Digital Harlem, a collaborative research project working to map the histories of Harlem, New York. His areas of interest include digital history, urban history, legal history and the history of sexuality. in history and English from the University of Otago in New Zealand and a Ph.D. He has published multiple books of poetry and is an editor for "Coming Through: Voices of a South Carolina Gullah Community from WPA Oral Histories." Stephen Robertson, PanelistDirector, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason UniversityRobertson has a B.A. VCU Libraries provides access to these items to support research and inquiry. Digital Collections come from a broad range of sources, including materials that are offensive or contain negative stereotypes. in early modern English literature from the University of Michigan. Collections are presented in a variety of formats, including photographs, art, text, video, and audio. in creative writing from the University of Iowa and a Ph.D. Aaron McCullough, PanelistEditorial Director, Michigan Publishing, University of MichiganMcCullough has an M.F.A. She is working with the Orlando Project, which uses digital tools for critical literary and historical research.
She has an extensive list of publications and received the Society for Digital Humanities Outstanding Achievement Award in 2006 for digital scholarship. She specializes in Victorian writing, feminist theory, digital humanities and interdisciplinary research. in English from the University of Alberta. Susan Brown, PanelistProfessor, English and Theater Studies, University of GuelphBrown has a Ph.D. This set of images is part of James Branch Cabell Library's 'Richmond and Virginia Print and Map Collection,' housed in Special Collections and Archives. His fields of interest include early American history, gender and sexuality, witchcraft and religious culture. The Richmond Nineteenth-Century Print Collection includes 146 images of buildings, streetscapes, events, and scenes of daily life of Richmond, Virginia.
Please register: Panelists leading the discussion - with Q&A and a free reception - are: Richard Godbeer, ModeratorProfessor, History, University of Miami and incoming Director of the Humanities Research Center, Virginia Commonwealth UniversityGodbeer has a B.A. Is the book dead? How will content creators, writers, artists and creative thinkers define and redefine expression and publishing? “Scholar, Maker, Creator: New Humanities Conversations,” the newest panel from the VCU Libraries’ Digital Pragmata series, investigates the humanities in new times. The planners include the organizers of VCU Libraries Digital Pragmata program. The dynamism of the digital age is changing everything about how we create and communicate. In Richmond, Virginia, on the campus of Virginia Commonwealth University.