Humanities Futures: Franklin Humanities Institute
Humanities Futures: Franklin Humanities Institute
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North Carolina Central University Digital Humanities Fellowships

A collaboration between the Franklin Humanities Institute (FHI) at Duke University and the College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) at North Carolina Central University (NCCU),  this fellowship program is designed for NCCU faculty and geared towards increasing the use of digital humanities in the classroom. The initiative also promotes Duke-NCCU exchanges around digital pedagogy and digital scholarship.

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  • Ram Neta – “Teaching Writing as a Second Language”

    — April 5, 2017 —

  • 2017 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium

    — May 6, 2017 —

  • 2018 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium

    — May 5, 2018 —

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    2018 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium | Carolyn (Collie) Fulford on DH and Technical Communications

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    2018 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium | Charmaine McKissick-Melton, 100 Years of Advertising

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    2018 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium | Lenora Helm Hammonds on a Digital Library for Teaching Artists

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    2018 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium | Shelvia Dancy, A History of the Black Press

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    2017 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium Keynote: K. J. Rawson on Creating the Digital Transgender Archive

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    2018 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium | Julie Nelson, Creating Visual Stories and Digital Arguments

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    2018 FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows Symposium | Tony Frazier, The African Presence in the English Archives

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  • Latest Blogs

    • Transgender Studies: Course Listings & Sample Reading List October 15, 2019
    • FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows holds second annual symposium June 7, 2018
    • Table of Contents for Humanities Futures Papers December 4, 2017
    • Instructor Guest Post: Building Global Audiences for the Franklin Humanities Institute September 25, 2017
    • Announcing new cohort of FHI-NCCU Digital Humanities Fellows (2017-18) August 19, 2017
  • Latest Papers

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    • Neurodiversities | Deborah Jenson: Flaubert’s Brain: Epilepsy, Mimesis, and Injured-Self Narrative
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    activism, Aesthetics Now, african american studies, african studies, alt-ac(tivism), anthropocene, archives, blackness, black outdoors, breath body voice conference, bruno latour, climate change, concepts/figures/art forms seminars, cultural anthropology, democracy, department partnerships, Departments, Digital Futures, digital humanities, duke global health, Duke Health, Duke University, environment, global & emerging humanities working groups, global and emerging humanities working groups, global Asian health humanities, global blackness, graduate students, health/medical humanities, health humanities, humanities, inter-departmental seminars, literature, medical humanities, medicine, performance, politics, public humanities, race, Religion, social justice, sound studies, theory, utopia, water
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