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The THL will retire in July 2013. Please visit the Retiring the THL Project for more information.

Digital Humanities

Camille Villa

Academic Position
Undergraduate

Bio: 
I am a third year undergraduate in the History Department. My area of concentration will most likely be in American History, but my overarching interest in historical theory has also led me to coursework in antiquity. I currently facilitate a DeCal introducing undergraduates to the craft of historical research and the wealth of library resources available at the university. I am a passionate about empowering undergraduates to utilize the resources of one of the world's top research libraries (which includes a uniquely accessible special collections library!). The class syllabus and students' weekly research journals can be viewed at: http://historicalresearchworkshop.wordpress.com/
Why You Joined the Lab: 
I have a budding interest in the digital humanities and am seeking out projects where I can offer my assistance and gain research experience and/or technical skills.

Matthew C. Mariner

Academic Position
Faculty

Bio: 
I'm the Head of Special Collections and Digital Initiatives at the Auraria Library in Denver, CO, a tri-institutional library serving the University of Colorado Denver, Metropolitan State University of Denver, and Community College of Denver. Prior to my current position, I worked for 6 years as a technologist at the University of Florida Digital Library Center, focusing on optical character recognition operations, audiovisual digitization, and digital humanities. Presently I'm hard at work building a digital library program from scratch and exploring digital humanities projects supported by Auraria's robust special collections department. I'm particularly interested in the enhancement of historic photographs through visual annotation and their integration in larger, more complex digital objects like node-bearing maps and manuscript collections. It is the contextualization of these objects on a familiar, sensuous platform that I find most engaging. On a personal note, I'm also interested in the archiving challenges posed by computer games, which not only present hurdles as obsolete media, but as more complex objects that include ephemera, boxes, and other paper objects now seen as irrelevant to modern gaming tastes.
Why You Joined the Lab: 
I joined to make connections with other humanists, discover their projects, and share some of my own.

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LB Johnson

Academic Position
Research Staff

Why You Joined the Lab: 
Research as content writer for PSR's Commission on Strategic Direction

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Dalia Guerreiro

Academic Position
Graduate Student

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Matthew Mewhinney

Academic Position
Graduate Student

Bio: 
Hi, I'm Matt Mewhinney. I am a native of San Francisco and I am in my first year of a PhD program in Japanese literature at UC Berkeley.
Why You Joined the Lab: 
I would like to create a project on kanshi (classical Chinese verse in Japan) sometime during my five years here. I hope the lab will open more avenues of communication with people who can help me think creatively about the utility of classical language and poetics in the formations of nationhood and modernity. As a separate project, I am interested in digitizing all classical Chinese poetry and creating a database for specialists and non-specialists alike.

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