BEGIN:VCALENDAR X-WR-TIMEZONE:America/Chicago PRODID:-//University of Iowa//Events 1.0//EN VERSION:2.0 CALSCALE:GREGORIAN BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20240328T094628Z DTSTART:20230217T160000 DTEND:20230217T173000 SUMMARY:Building and Using Latine/x Digital Humanities Archives DESCRIPTION:Building and Using Latine/x Digital Humanities Archives\n\nElena Foulis\, PhD\n\nThis presentation discusses the use of Latine/x digital archives about the Midwest\, as critical digital humanities projects that highlight the long history of the Latinx/e in this region. Through decolonial practices of using oral history\, ethnography\, and performances\, I discuss the importance of building a counter-archive of Latinx experiences.\n\nDigital Humanities Workshop: Storytelling in Latine/x Communities\n\nParticipants in this workshop\, will have an opportunity to think about digital scholarship and data visualization as critical to offering counter-narratives of minoritized communities. \n\n \n\nBIO:\n\nDr. Elena Foulis is an Ohio State alumnus and holds B.A and M.A degrees in Spanish and Latin American Literature and a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies. Her research and teaching interests include U.S. Latina/o literature\, Spanish for Heritage Learners\, and Oral History. She has presented her work at national and international conferences. She teaches undergraduate courses in service-learning\, Latin American Literature and Spanish for heritage learners. Her articles explore Latin@ voices through oral history and performance\, identity and place through linguistic landscape and ethnography and family history in advanced heritage language writing courses. Dr. Foulis began a digital oral history project about Latin@s in Ohio in 2014\, which is being archived at the Center for Folklore Studies’ internet collection. Some of these narratives can be found in her iBook titled\, Latin@ Stories Across Ohio. She is also host and producer for the Latin@ Stories podcast\, an extension of her oral history project. She is currently working on a Digital Humanities project about the 21 lives lost in Uvalde\, Texas. In 2022\, she was a TedxOhioState speaker\, her TedTallk was titled\, “We Are More Than a Statistic: Oral History and Latinx Identities.” \n\n\nhttps://events.uiowa.edu/76603 LOCATION:null\, null UID:edu.uiowa.events-prod-76603 X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Building and Using Latine/x Digital Humanities Archives
\n\nElena Foulis\, PhD
\n\nThis presentation discusses the use of Latine/x digital archives about the Midwest\, as critical digital humanities projects that highlight the long history of the Latinx/e in this region. Through decolonial practices of using oral history\, ethnography\, and performances\, I discuss the importance of building a counter-archive of Latinx experiences.
\n\nDigital Humanities Workshop: Storytelling in Latine/x Communities
\n\nParticipants in this workshop\, will have an opportunity to think about digital scholarship and data visualization as critical to offering counter-narratives of minoritized communities.
\n\n\n\n
BIO:
\n\nDr. Elena Foulis is an Ohio State alumnus and holds B.A and M.A degrees in Spanish and Latin American Literature and a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies. Her research and teaching interests include U.S. Latina/o literature\, Spanish for Heritage Learners\, and Oral History. She has presented her work at national and international conferences. She teaches undergraduate courses in service-learning\, Latin American Literature and Spanish for heritage learners. Her articles explore Latin@ voices through oral history and performance\, identity and place through linguistic landscape and ethnography and family history in advanced heritage language writing courses. Dr. Foulis began a digital oral history project about Latin@s in Ohio in 2014\, which is being archived at the Center for Folklore Studies’ internet collection. Some of these narratives can be found in her iBook titled\, Latin@ Stories Across Ohio. She is also host and producer for the Latin@ Stories podcast\, an extension of her oral history project. She is currently working on a Digital Humanities project about the 21 lives lost in Uvalde\, Texas. In 2022\, she was a TedxOhioState speaker\, her TedTallk was titled\, “We Are More Than a Statistic: Oral History and Latinx Identities.”
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