Digital Research Apprenticeship: Projects For Intersectional Justice (Student Research and Artifacts)
In 2024, many of Dr. Tanya Clement's student researchers created dynamic Digital Humanities projects, and some were able to share those projects with broader academic audiences:
Trent Wintermeier (graduate student), Monica Olivio, and Nati Roman (undergraduates) presented “Listening and Annotating Spirituality in the Gloria Anzaldúa Archive” as part of Platforms, Power, and Pedagogy. Computers and Writing Conference. Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, Texas, in June 2024.
Dr. Teri Fickling presented her project “Fostering Intimacy in the Archive: Engaging Undergraduates with Leigh Hunt’s Hair Book” with Makayla Baughman (undergraduate) at the American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies (ASECS) 2024 Annual Meeting in Toronto, Canada. The presentation was part of a Roundtable titled “Engaging Undergraduates with the Material Text.” Dr. Fickling's Digital Humanities project was partially in conjunction with PTF Tanya Clement's PTF Initiative.
Additionally, many other students' final projects are available online:
- Annotating Adler: Identity and Embodiment in the Stella Adler Collection. Created by Zoe Bursztajn-Illingworth, Dahee Lee, Bella Siu, and Joshua Sklar.
- Psychic and Spirituality Recordings in the Gloria Evangelina Anzaldúa Papers. Created by Trent Wintermeier, Monica Olivio, and Nati Roman.
- The Leigh Hunt Hair Book. Created by Makayla Baughman.
Finally, the UT Ancient Americas Art and Art History Collection is a compendium of student research projects, developed by the LLILAS Benson Digital Scholarship Office and continually updated and expanded by undergraduate coursework and research projects.
