Digital Humanities

Bearing and Sharing the Burdens of Mentoring in the COVID-19 Pandemic (TAPA)

Date
Fellow(s)

This invited paper is part of a group of six articles on "rupture and repair" in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic published in Transactions of the American Philological Association, the journal of the professional organization for American Classicists.

A Classics Podcast Gets Greek Greats Onto Your Phone (Life & Letters Magazine)

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Fellow(s)

This profile of "Musings in Greek Literature" appeared in the Spring 2023 edition of Life and Letters, the magazine of the UT College of Liberal Arts. This article explores the podcast and its origins, which occurred spontaneously in a conversation with Adam Rabinowitz about experiential learning. At the time, Adam was a PTF, but I wasn't. I re-applied multiple times to the PTF program and was ultimately selected for this podcast project in large part because of Adam's support and encouragement.

Movies We Dig cover with statues in background

The Odyssey (1997), with Deborah Beck (Movies We Dig Podcast)

Date
Fellow(s)

I made a guest appearance on the Classics media podcast "Movies We Dig" in part because the hosts knew of my work with "Musings in Greek Literature." On this podcast, hosted by several young Classicists including two graduates of the UT Classics Ph.D. program, I discussed the made-for-TV version of Homer's Odyssey starring Armand Assante and Isabelle Rosselini (1997).

Musing in Greek Literature

Musings in Greek Literature podcast

Date
Fellow(s)

"Musings in Greek Literature" is a podcast co-produced by Prof. Deborah Beck and advanced UT undergraduate students of ancient Greek.

Tanya Clement, with shoulder-length gray hair and a black shirt, smiles while wearing gold accessories and sitting in front of a staircase.

Tanya Clement

Current Fellow
English
Information
|
College of Liberal Arts
School of Information
Initiative Focus
Digital Humanities
Inclusive Teaching and Learning

Tanya E Clement is an Associate Professor in the Department of English at the University of Texas at Austin. Her primary areas of research are textual studies, sound studies, and infrastructure studies as these concerns impact academic research, research libraries, and the creation of research tools and resources in Digital Humanities (DH).

Deborah Beck smiling, with grey hair split down the middle and wearing an orange top, against a grey background.

Deborah Beck

Alumni
Classics
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College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Digital Humanities
Experiential Learning

Deborah Beck has won various awards for both teaching and research, including the 2021 Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Classics at the College and University Level from the Society for Classical Studies and a prize for Excellence in Faculty Teaching from the Gamma Sigma chapter of the national Classics undergraduate honors society Eta Sigma Phi (2019) and two Plumer Visiting Research Fellowships at St Anne’s College, Oxford (2017 and 2019). Her main research interest is ancient Greek and Roman epic poetry, especially Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey.

Photo of Daniel Birkholz

Daniel Birkholz

Alumni
English
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Digital Humanities
Experiential Learning
Rabinowitz headshot

Adam Rabinowitz

Alumni
Classics
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Undergraduate Research
Digital Humanities

I'm an Associate Professor in the Department of Classics. My research focuses on the archaeology of Greek colonization, culture-contact, and ancient food and drink, and I have an active field project at the ancient site of Histria in Romania, near the Danube delta. In my teaching, I try to find ways to engage students with primary sources and involve them in research inside and outside the classroom as part of the learning process. I am particularly interested in digital tools and platforms that allow students in the Humanities to carry out public-facing research projects.

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