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Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School [Bursary Applications Open]

Digital Humanities

Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School [Bursary Applications Open]

30th January 2026 by Joan Murphy

Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School [Bursary Closing Date Feb 9th]

From 24-28 August at the University of Oxford, practitioners, students and academic researchers will come together to explore digital humanities together through a range of courses covering DH tools, techniques and research methods. 

With options for all levels, led by experts who are innovating in the digital humanities, DHOxSS is a unique opportunity to enhance your skills and grow your network professionally in a supportive environment.

In 2026 there are four in-person strands and two online strands on offer, as well as a virtual learning environment and two keynote talks which will be made available to all participants.

Available bursaries
Bursaries for online and in-person attendance are available for students, early career researchers and people currently working in a gallery, library, archive or museum. Specific bursaries are also available for Digital Humanities researchers who use historical primary sources in history, literature or the social sciences, studying at either DPhil/PhD or MPhil level in a range of global regions. All bursaries cover the registration fee for the Summer School. Some may also cover accommodation and offer a contribution towards travel – you will be notified of the full details if you are successful.

How to apply 

https://app.onlinesurveys.jisc.ac.uk/s/oxford/digital-humanities-at-oxford-summer-school-2026-bursary-applica
Bursary applications close on Monday 9 February at noon (GMT).

Summer School information sessions
If you have questions about the Summer School, why not join us for an information session in March? We will run two sessions to cater for different time zones – sign up here.

Session 1: Monday 23 March, 5pm (GMT)
Session 2: Wednesday 25 March, 8am (GMT)


Available workshop strands

Online:
•    
An Introduction to Humanities Data
•    Using AI Tools and Technologies in Research Libraries

In person: 
•    An Introduction to Digital Humanities
•    Applied Data Analysis 
•    From Text to Tech
•    An Introduction to TEI 

Further detail on the programme.

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Posted in: Awards, Digital Humanities Tagged: Bursaries, Digital Humanities, Summer Schools

SynFlow: Continuous Semantics Change Analysis via Dependency Co-occurences [Jan 26, online, @17:00 GMT]

21st January 2026 by Joan Murphy

SynFlow: Continuous Semantics Change Analysis via Dependency Co-occurences

The first talk of the Data in Historical Linguistics Seminar Series 2026 will take place remotely on Monday 26 January 2026 at 5pm GMT. Bách Phan-Tất (KU Leuven, Belgium) will be presenting on SynFlow: Continuous Semantics Change Analysis via Dependency Co-occurences

Registration for this talk will close at midnight on the Friday before the event and the link for this can be accessed here: https://forms.gle/HEnpTKreXdrZqjfA8 

Participants will receive a Microsoft Teams link via email on the morning of the talk. 

The abstract for this talk can be found at this page.

The programme and registration links for all talks in the series can be found on our website: 

2026 Programme

This seminar series is run by Andrea Farina (King’s College London) and Dr Mathilde Bru and is aimed at PhD students and early career researchers. The purpose of this seminar series is to bring together researchers working on historical linguistics with a quantitative approach, and to discuss current avenues of research in this topic. We hope that these seminars will nurture international collaboration and establish academic ties among researchers working on similar topics in this field.

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Posted in: Digital Humanities, Methods, Webinar Tagged: Computational Analysis, Computational Humanities, Linguistics, Semantics

Measuring Narrative Space: A Computational Study of German and English Prose Fiction [Jan 13, online, 10-12 CET]

12th January 2026 by Joan Murphy

Measuring Narrative Space: A Computational Study of German and English Prose Fiction [Jan 13, online, 10-12 CET]

The lecture is public and can be attended only via zoom. The talk will not be recorded.

Dr. Katrin Rohrbacher (Nürnberg/Erlangen):

Measuring Narrative Space: A Computational Study of German and English Prose Fiction

In this talk, I will present ongoing work on measuring the notion of narrative space using machine learning methods, specifically by fine-tuning BERT-based classification models and applying them to a large collection of German and English historical prose fiction, including both canonical works and non-fiction. Moving from theorization and conceptualization to dataset creation, modeling, analysis, and interpretation, I will outline the steps involved in conducting a computational study of this kind. We will examine results that show how the concepts of “setting” and “lived space” have been used in fiction over time and discuss their implications for “experientiality” and embodiment more broadly, including cross-linguistic perspectives between German and English. The talk also introduces a methodological model for iterative, interpretive “computational reading” that bridges qualitative and quantitative approaches.

When: January 13, 2026, 10-12 hs

Where:  Zoom 

Zoom link:  https://uni-bielefeld.zoom-x.de/j/67280092106?pwd=Zlzqqy980r2N7I1wTktAbbV33tCBaj.1

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Posted in: Events, Literature, Uncategorised, Webinar Tagged: Computational Analysis, Digital Humanities, German, Prose

Technical Writing in the Humanities: a facilitated writing sprint [Dec 15, online, 13:30-15:00 GMT]

12th December 2025 by Joan Murphy

Technical Writing in the Humanities: a facilitated writing sprint

The Digital Skills in Arts and Humanities Network (DISKAH) is organising a webinar on “Technical Writing in the Humanities: a facilitated writing sprint” in collaboration with the Programming Historian to support interested colleagues in developing a publication targeted to this journal, and more widely in communicating your technical workflows within Digital Humanities research to relevant audiences.

Webinar date and time: Monday 15 December, 13:30-15:00 (GMT)

Please register here for the webinar: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/diskah-webinar-technical-writing-in-the-humanities-tickets-1976718137160

Further information about the webinar: https://culturedigitalskills.org/webinar-diskah-programming-historian/

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Posted in: Digital Humanities, Events, Methods, Workshops Tagged: Digital Humanities, Programming Historian, Technical Writing

When Machines Read Manuscripts: Tools and Challenges in Handwritten Text Recognition [Dec 16, online, @16:45 CET]

11th December 2025 by Joan Murphy

When Machines Read Manuscripts: Tools and Challenges in Handwritten Text Recognition

The FSP Digital Humanities at the University of Vienna is very pleased to announce the third of the Digital Humanities Invited Lecture Series for the winter semester 2025/26. All lectures will be streamed via the following link: 

https://ustream.univie.ac.at/live/4b4961fd-6b8d-4be7-a222-62912c0dada0

16 December, 16:45 CET –  Dr. Jan Odstrčilík, Austrian Academy of Sciences

When Machines Read Manuscripts: Tools and Challenges in Handwritten Text Recognition

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Posted in: Digital Humanities, Events, Lecture Tagged: Digital Humanities, Text Recognition, Tools

Submission deadline for Digital Humanities 2026 extended to Dec 15, 2025

1st December 2025 by Joan Murphy

The DH2026 organisers announce that the submission deadline for Digital Humanities 2026 proposals has been extended to December 15, 2025.

Next year’s conference (July 27–31, 2026) will be hosted by the Korean Association for Digital Humanities (KADH) at the Daejeon Convention Center in Daejeon, South Korea. 
The theme for this conference is “Engagement.” Submissions are welcome in multiple formats, including long and short papers, posters, workshops, and mini-conferences.

Please visit the Call for Proposals on the conference website for more details: https://dh2026.adho.org.

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Posted in: Call for Papers, Digital Humanities Tagged: ADHO, CfP, DH2026, Digital Humanities

Funeral for Ashes: Combining Art, Ecology, and Immersive Technology [Nov 18, Online and in person, @12pm]. University of Galway Centre for Creative Technologies.

14th November 2025 by Joan Murphy

Funeral for Ashes: Combining Art, Ecology, and Immersive Technology

Date & Time: 12pm, Tuesday 18th November

Location: Studio 3, O’Donoghue Centre for Drama, Theatre & Performance, University of Galway

Join artists Conor Maloney and John Conneely for an in-depth masterclass on Funeral for Ashes, an immersive installation honouring Ireland’s endangered ash woodlands. Blending TouchDesigner, Bitwig Studio, LiDAR, and photogrammetry, the work transforms ecological data and human movement into a living, responsive environment of sound and light.


In this session, the artists will unpack the creative and technical process behind the piece — from 3D scanning native trees to synchronising generative audio and real-time visuals — and discuss how digital art can serve as both ritual and environmental reflection.

Register to Attend: https://ti.to/creative-tech/masterclass-funeral-for-ashes

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Posted in: Digital Arts Practice, Environmental DH, Galway, Visual Arts, Workshops Tagged: Creative Technologies, Digital Arts Practice, Ecology, Environmental Data, Immersive Technologies

The Case for Computational Environmental Humanities [Nov 17, online, @17:00 CET]

13th November 2025 by Joan Murphy Leave a Comment

Analyzing Nature-Culture Entanglements at Scale: The Case for Computational Environmental Humanities

The Digital Humanities Network at the University of Potsdam cordially invites you to the next lecture in the ‘Code & Culture’ talk series.

Our first guest is Manuel Burghardt (University of Leipzig), with a talk titled “Analyzing Nature-Culture Entanglements at Scale: The Case for Computational Environmental Humanities“ (full abstract here). The lecture will take place on Monday 17 November 2025, 17:00 (CET), online via Zoom. 

Please register here to get the Zoom link: https://www.uni-potsdam.de/en/digital-humanities/activities/code-culture-lecture-series/registration.

This semester, we will have a special focus on digital environmental humanities, preparing the ground for our “Environments in and as Networks” Hackathon (Potsdam, 15-17.04.2026; more details and registration: https://www.uni-potsdam.de/en/digital-humanities/events/environmental-digital-humanities-hackathon). 

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Posted in: Environmental DH, Events, Webinar Tagged: Computational Environmental Humanities, Digital Humanities

Generating Futures: Using AI to Imagine Sustainable Places [Nov 11-14, in person, Galway]

5th November 2025 by Joan Murphy

Generating Futures: Using AI to Imagine Sustainable Places

Dates: 11th – 14th November, 2025

Location: Studio 3, O’Donoghue Centre for Drama, Theatre & Performance, University of Galway

Can Generative AI help us imagine a more sustainable world? Generating Futures brings together communities, artists, geographers and climate scientists to co-create visions of a sustainable future using the power of AI. Funded by Research Ireland as part of the Science Week 2025 programme, this series of interactive workshops are facilitated by PhD researchers based at the Centre for Creative Technologies.

Workshops:


Reimagining Nuns Island: A Speculative Design Walk

Collect Your Own Small & Local Dataset

Envisioning Future Placemaking through AI Visualisation Technologies

Brain Computer Interfaces and imagination – When Science and Art Meet

Full details and links to registration are available via: https://universityofgalway.ie/creative-tech/collaboration/science-week-2025/

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Posted in: AI, Environmental DH, Events, Galway, Workshops Tagged: AI, Creative Technologies, Galway, sustainability

Reference Extraction at the Intersection of AI Research and the Digital Humanities: Validation, Interoperability and Collaboration [Nov 4, hybrid]

3rd November 2025 by Joan Murphy

Reference Extraction at the Intersection of AI Research and the Digital Humanities: Validation, Interoperability and Collaboration

This informal meeting is meant mainly to foster collaboration and knowledge exchange between researchers and practitioners working at the intersection of data extraction, artificial intelligence, and the digital humanities. In the workshop, we continue to address the challenge of extracting heterogeneous references from texts, particularly from historical documents and humanities or legal scholarship. This second workshop focuses on three key themes emerging from the 2023 discussions:

  1. Validation: How can we evaluate and benchmark the performance of different reference extraction tools and approaches, particularly with large language models?
  2. Interoperability: How can we ensure that different tools, datasets, and workflows can work together effectively through shared data models and formats?
  3. Collaboration: How can researchers, developers, and institutions work together to advance the field of reference extraction?

The program is available online at: https://mpilhlt.github.io/reference-extraction/workshop-2025/programme/

The event will take place in-person and online. Register at https://plan.events.mpg.de/e/refextract25 

A link for online attendance will be sent to registered participants before the event. Also, even if you cannot attend, but want to be informed about updates, materials being made available, etc. you can notify us about this at the registration link.

Programme

Tuesday 04 November 2025

Onboarding

09:00-09:15 Arrival/Registration

09:15-09:45 Christian Boulanger/Andreas Wagner (mpilhlt): Welcome and Upshot from RefExtract2023, State of the Discussion

09:45-10:00 Coffee Break

Research presentations

10:00-12:30

  1. Hiba Arnaout (TU Darmstadt): In-depth Research Impact Summarization through Fine-Grained Temporal Citation Analysis
  2. Yurui Zhu/Matteo Romanello (Odoma): Benchmarking Large Language Models on Reference Extraction and Parsing in the Social Sciences and Humanities
  3. Sofía Aguilar Valdez (Saarland University): How Scientific Ideas Evolve
  4. Open Discussion and Ad-Hoc Presentation of Research

12:30-13:30 Lunch

Datasets, Infrastructure and Interoperability

13:30-15:30

  1. Angelo Di Iorio/Matteo Guenci/Marta Soricetti*/Silvio Peroni/Lorenzo Paolini*/Ivan Heibi (University of Bologna): Citation Extractor and Classifier: Pipeline and Datasets (*presenting)
  2. Tamara Heck/Christoph Schindler/Verena Weimer/Philipp Mayr/Ahsan Shahid (DIPF/GESIS): Open Citation Data for Educational Research
  3. Christian Boulanger, Andreas Wagner (mpilhlt): Datasets in the Legal Theory Knowledge Graph Project
  4. Interoperability Roundtable: Open Discussion on Data Models and Data Formats

15:30-16:00 Coffee Break

Tools, Workflows and Pipelines

16:00-17:30

  1. Raphael Schlattmann/Malte Vogl (mpigea)/Aleksandra Kaye (TU Berlin/mpigea): LLM-Based Knowledge Graph Extraction Pipeline
  2. Luca Foppiano (ScienciaLAB): Training the Grobid Reference Extraction Models
  3. Christian Boulanger/Andreas Wagner (mpilhlt): Annotation Tools for Machine Learning: PDF-TEI Editor (for LLamore & Grobid), Prodigy, TEI-Publisher

17:30-18:30 Takeaways, Way Forward, Closing

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Posted in: AI, Data, Digital Humanities, Events, Methods, Research IT, TEI, Tools, Workflows Tagged: AI, Data Science, Digital Humanities, Events, Methods, TEI, Tools, Workflows
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News & Upcoming Events

  • Music and Digital Humanities [Mondays @ 16:00 CEST]
  • Web Archiving with DRI [April 15 @ 11am, online]
  • An Interactive Tool for Interpretable Semantic Change Analysis via Definition-Aligned Embedding Spaces [April 13 @17:00 BST, online]
  • DARIAH Annual Event – Draft Programme [Announcement]
  • Bursary Announcement – UK-IE Digital Humanities Association [Deadline 13 April]
  • 3rd Symposium on Digital Art in Ireland [April 22, in person, UCC] Registration Open
  • DARIAH Digital Arts and Humanities Training and Summer School Small Grants 2026 [Call closes April 16]
  • Europeana Café – AI at the intersection of research and cultural heritage [Mar 25 @ 13:00 CET, online]

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