|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - On Monday, March 24, Dr. George Welling, professor
of humanities computing at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands,
will give two talks at The University of Alabama. Both lectures
are free and open to the public.
The first talk is from noon-1 p.m. in room 227 of Gallalee Hall
and is titled “Humanities Computing: A Federation of Disciplines.”
The lecture is centered on the philosophy of the department of humanities
computing at the University of Groningen. Welling will discuss humanities
computing as a discipline and how it affects history, art history,
computational linguistics and dialectology.
The second talk will take place from 4-5 p.m., in the Summersell
Room (room 251) of ten Hoor Hall. Welling’s lecture “History
and Computing, or should we say Computational Linguistics?”
says there is a good case to be made for the term “computational
history,” meaning that part of the history discipline that
cannot be carried out without computational methods.
Welling has taught at the University of Amsterdam, the University
of Bergen, Norway, and at the American Studies Center in Salzburg,
Austria. He is a former board member of the Association for History
and Computing, and was one of the earliest Web developers to link
the humanities with technology and computing. One of his many early
cutting edge and award winning Web projects, which was developed
with his students and mounted initially in 1995, is “The American
Revolution and What Followed,” which is available at http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/.
Faculty and students in the humanities, as well as computer science,
library and information sciences and education are encouraged to
attend. Welling’s expertise and overwhelming enthusiasm for
his teaching and research make for an exciting and inspiring experience.
UA’s department of history, the College of Arts and Sciences
Dean’s Office and the University Libraries are sponsoring
the lectures.
For more information contact Jessica Lacher-Feldman at jlfeldma@bama.ua.edu
or 205/348-0500.
|