I’m late in noting the great news from the Modern Language Association (MLA), which so many folks have already shared: MLA Journals Adopt New Open-Access-Friendly Author Agreements The journals of the Modern Language Association, including PMLA, Profession, and the ADE and ADFL bulletins, have adopted new open-access-friendly author agreements, which will go into use with their next full issues. The revised agreements leave copyright with the authors and explicitly permit authors to deposit in open-access repositories and post on personal or departmental Web sites the versions of their manuscripts accepted for publication. For more information on the new agreements, please contact the office of scholarlyRead More →

The news release below is from FIU-News and features a quote from Derek Merleaux (a great colleague at FIU), SobekCM (the software we all use and love), the Wolfsonian-FIU’s gorgeous new site and digital image catalog, and the value and impact of the support from FIU’s Technology fees for this important work; congratulations to Derek for his awesome work on this! The Wolfsonian-FIU has a new, sleeker online look. The museum recently gave its website a makeover that makes it easier for visitors to navigate and find what’s going on at its Miami Beach location. There’s a dedicated, streamlined page that’s all about current, past andRead More →

The news release below is from the University of Florida News; congratulations to UF’s Harn Museum of Art! GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The Harn Museum of Art at the University of Florida has received a $36,000 grant from the Korea National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage for the conservation of two hanging scroll masterpiece paintings by Korean artists working in the 18th- and 19th-centuries. This is the second consecutive year that the Harn has received funding from foundations based in Korea that are dedicated to sharing Korean culture, art and heritage. In 2011, the Harn Museum of Art received funding from the Korea Foundation and fromRead More →

Along with many others, I’m attending the ACURIL (Association of Caribbean University, Research and Institutional Libraries) Conference in Haiti. ACURIL is always a wonderful, amazing, impressive, and important conference. Last night Michel Martelly, the President of Haiti, was one of the speakers for the Opening Ceremony. The opening ceremony also included presentations by the ACURIL President Françoise Beaulieu Thybulle (MLIS, President of ACURIL 2011-2012) and the first Haitian ACURIL President in 1989-1990 (which congress could not be held in Haiti) Mr. Jean Wilfrid Bertrand (General Director of the National Archives of Haiti). There’s more about ACURIL 2012 on the conference website and press coverage in Le Matin. The conference hasRead More →

From News from MLA (Modern Language Association): #Alt-Academy Census If you have graduate training in the humanities and are working outside higher education teaching, the editors of #Alt-Academy would to like to hear from you. Visit the #Alt-Academy site to be included in #Alt-Academy’s directory and to learn more about its project. This is another example of MLA doing and facilitating important work. The most recent issue of MLA news also explains enhancements to the Job Information List (JIL) to add dossier and search-management tools at no cost for job applicants.  The new services support applicants, hiring committees, and recommendation letter writers, so this is an excellentRead More →

From the Centernet list: Networked Humanities: From Within and Without the University A Digital Humanities Symposium February 15-16, 2013 The University of Kentucky Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Media Program Keynote Speakers: Kathleen Stewart, Professor of Anthropology, University of Texas Malcolm McCullough, Professor of Architecture, University of Michigan Of all the topics of interest to the digital humanities, the network has received little attention among digital humanities proponents.  Yet, we live in a networked society: texts, sound, ideas, people, movements, consumerism, protest movements, politics, entertainment, academia, and other items circulate in networks that come together and break apart at various moments. While there exist networked spacesRead More →

CFP from the DLF email list (DLF-ANNOUNCE@lists.clir.org): The 2012 Digital Library Federation (DLF) Forum is seeking proposals for presentations, panel discussions, workshops, research updates, and hands-on, problem-solving sessions. The Forum is a working meeting where DLF members come together to discover better methods of working through sharing and collaboration. Participation is open to all those interested in contributing to and playing an active part in the successful future of digital libraries, museums and archives services and collections. Managing the digital content lifecycle is a complex challenge, requiring creative and collaborative approaches. In that spirit, and to maximize the Forum’s benefit and better facilitate the community¹s work, the Forum’s schedule will provide many opportunities toRead More →

The petition is here: http://wh.gov/6TH The petition states: Require free access over the Internet to scientific journal articles arising from taxpayer-funded research. We believe in the power of the Internet to foster innovation, research, and education. Requiring the published results of taxpayer-funded research to be posted on the Internet in human and machine readable form would provide access to patients and caregivers, students and their teachers, researchers, entrepreneurs, and other taxpayers who paid for the research. Expanding access would speed the research process and increase the return on our investment in scientific research. The highly successful Public Access Policy of the National Institutes of Health provesRead More →

From a news announcement: MITH will host the first annual Digital Humanities Winter Institute (DHWI), from Monday, January 7, 2013, to Friday, January 11, 2013, at the University of Maryland in College Park, Maryland. We’re delighted to be expanding the model pioneered by the highly-successful Digital Humanities Summer Institute (DHSI) at the University of Victoria to the United States. DHWI will provide an opportunity for scholars to learn new skills relevant to different kinds of digital scholarship while mingling with like-minded colleagues in coursework, social events, and lectures during an intensive, week-long event located amid the many attractions of the Washington, D.C. region. Courses are openRead More →

Version 1.1 of the SobekCM MARC Library (C#) has just been released. The SobekCM MARC Library is a C# library which contains classes for working in memory with MARC records ( http://www.loc.gov/marc/ ). This allows records to be read from MarcXML and Marc21 formats. Once in memory any field or subfield can be edited, added, or deleted. Then the record can be queried or saved again in either a MarcXML or Marc21 file format. This version supports two major changes:  Z39.50 support has been added to allow you to pull a MARC record from a Z39.50 endpoint directly into the MARC record class structure. To use thisRead More →