King's Seminar in Humanities Computing
Each year the King's Seminar in Humanities Computing presents a series of lectures and demonstrations by leading scholars, postgraduate students, and practitioners from across the disciplines of the humanities and nearby social sciences. The Seminar aims not only to present work at the leading edge of application but also to provide a forum in which this work is subject to critical reflection and thoughtful probing.
The Seminar includes the biennial Wisbey Lecture, in which a scholar of international standing is invited to explore the effects, implications, and promise of computing and communications technologies for the arts and humanities, and of the challenges that the arts and humanities pose for those technologies.
All events take place at King’s College London unless otherwise noted. The public is warmly invited. For further information contact Dr. John Lavagnino (john.lavagnino@kcl.ac.uk), (0)20 7848 2453.
The Seminar is promoted jointly by the Centre for Computing in the Humanities and the Office for Humanities Communication.
The Seminar includes the biennial Wisbey Lecture, in which a scholar of international standing is invited to explore the effects, implications, and promise of computing and communications technologies for the arts and humanities, and of the challenges that the arts and humanities pose for those technologies.
All events take place at King’s College London unless otherwise noted. The public is warmly invited. For further information contact Dr. John Lavagnino (john.lavagnino@kcl.ac.uk), (0)20 7848 2453.
The Seminar is promoted jointly by the Centre for Computing in the Humanities and the Office for Humanities Communication.
Programme for 2010-11
This year’s programme was organized by John Lavagnino.
Autumn semester
Thursday 8th September, 1pm
Stan Ruecker (University of Alberta)
The Ocular Proof: Humanities Visualization in Action
CCH seminar room, 26–29 Drury Lane
Abstract and speaker's bio
Autumn semester
Thursday 8th September, 1pm
Stan Ruecker (University of Alberta)
The Ocular Proof: Humanities Visualization in Action
CCH seminar room, 26–29 Drury Lane
Abstract and speaker's bio

