Sponsored by the Digital Humanities Summer Institute, the Public Knowledge Project, the UVic MakerLab, the Electronic Textual Cultures Lab, and the Implementing New Knowledge Environments project, this workshop offers participants both theoretical and hands-on considerations of a number of innovative ways in which the Digital Humanities are engaging scholarly communication and publishing. The session is structured around an opening talk, two sessions of breakout groups (some seminar, some hands on), and group discussion as follows.
Participants from the ETCL include Ray Siemens, Alyssa Arbuckle, Nina Belojevic, and Matthew Hiebert.
Details are available at http://dhsi.org/events.php#DHSI@MLA and http://www.mla.org/program_details?prog_id=3&year=2015.