THATCamp DC2015 is coming April 18, 2015 to Foggy Bottom. Really.

Please join us for DC2015 THATCamp. The un-conference will be held from 9:30 to 3:45 with breakfast and lunch included, and is organized by the GWU students in HIST3001 Digital Humanities and the Historian. We anticipate a structure somewhat like this:

9:30-10:00 Registration and breakfast in B156 Phillips Hall (two short blocks from Foggy Bottom Metro, public parking across the street).

Breakfast (bagels, creamcheese, coffee)

Breakfast (bagels, creamcheese, coffee)

registration

Registration at DC2014

10:00-10:50 Introductions and setting the agenda (maximum 16 sessions, 4 rooms and 4 timeslots.) Come with an idea for a conversation you would be willing to host or post in advance as a comment at the bottom of the page “Proposals” on this website.

9dh14

Introductions around the room, session proposals

Schedule Produced in the first session from participant proposals

11:00-11:50 Session 1 x 4 rooms

rooms

Checking the sessions and rooms

12:00-12:50 Session 2 x 4 rooms

Self-organized sessions in GWU classrooms

Self-organized sessions in GWU classrooms

6dh14

Breaks between sessions for networking; continuing the conversation

12:50-1:40 Lunch

1:45-2:30 Session 3 x 4 rooms

2dh14

Checking the agenda online

2:45-3:30 Session 4 x 4 rooms

HIST3001

The DC2014 THATCamp organizers

3:30-3:45 Gathering in original large room Phillips B156  for  closure and to say farewell

End of THATCamp2014

End of THATCamp2014

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There’s a new THATCamp being planned!  Set aside April 18th on your calendar, register now, and we will give you more info as we know it. Currently we expect to hold it in B156 and 109, 110, 111 Phillips Hall on the GWU campus, at 22nd between H and I streets NW, one block from Foggy Bottom metro station and across H Street from Gelman Library. Meanwhile, read more about the THATCamp movement and browse other THATCamps at thatcamp.org. Visit DC2014.thatcamp.org to see what we did last year.

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About Diane Cline

I'm an ancient Greek historian and classicist and I teach a course in Digital History at GWU. My most recent research projects use Social Network Analysis to examine the relationships of Alexander the Great, Philip II, Socrates and Pericles. I am interested in understanding what made the Greeks so innovative and creative, and I believe their social networks is part of the answer. Classes taught in 2013-17: History of Greece, Alexander the Great, Classical Athens, Classical Mythology, and HIST 3001 Digital History. Author of National Geographic's The Greeks: An Illustrated History (2016).