DHREES is dedicated to the intersection of Digital Humanities and Russian and East European studies at Yale University. Examples of projects include: Avant-Garde and Emigrés, Brodsky Lab, or Topic Modeling the Slavic Review.
Includes the full-text of Cyrillic manuscripts, Epic national poetry, Old printed books, Old and rare books, other book & graphic collections (digital texts of Zorana Djindjic, Momcilo Nastasijevic, books on Napoleon, Serbian children's books, etc.), cartographic materials, engravings and art material, photographic documents, posters and documentary material, printed music & sound recordings; catalogs and bibliographies (including the Serbian National Bibliography), and many other collections.
The Encyclopedia of the Dog is a complete and freely accessible bilingual digital edition of Sasha Sokolov’s 1980 novel Between Dog and Wolf. It features both the original Russian text and Alexander Boguslawski’s English translation as well as multiple kinds of annotations to help readers grasp the various meanings, allusions, and layers of the novel.
FEB-web is a project instituted in 1995 by the Gorky Institute of World Literature and the Informregistr Center at the Russian Ministry for Communications, and online since July 2002. FEB-web is, first and foremost, a repository of Russian verbal art and the scholarly and other texts vital to understanding it. FEB-web makes the canon of Russian verbal art available free of charge to anyone with internet access.
This inventory includes (1) Non-Searchable image files (2) OCR'd or keyboarded text (3) Encoded text and (4) Overlap categories. Browse by category or keyword search. This is a project of the Subcommittee on Digital Projects of the Bibliography & Documentation Committee of the Association for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies.
Life Among the Romanies: the Heroic Past & Present holds materials from the “Life Among Romanies, the Heroic Past and Present” program in 2007 and photographs from the Romanies without Romance cycle by Jindrich Streit which were also part of the 2007 program.
The Reactor Room is a digital installation that seeks to facilitate public engagement with the Chornobyl
catastrophe and its history and mythology.
The Archive of the Rossica Society is a digital library of the Society's Rossica Journal of Russian Philately, excluding issues published within the last three years, and other digitized holdings from the Society's Library, together with Russian philatelic resources collected by the University of Florida and its partners. This digital library is open to anyone with Internet access.
The Center has three interrelated purposes:
1. to facilitate and promote the research programs of humanities* scholars at the University,
2. to provide an intellectual space and a physical location within the University and College for critical and collaborative discussions of the humanities that reach across and beyond individual disciplines, and
3. to provide a place for outreach to the community in which we live and teach.
Check out this guide if you want to learn more about the Digital Humanities are and the different projects and initiatives happening at UF.
The Scott Nygren Scholars Studio, located in Library West, is an emerging community center for digital humanities and digital scholarship at the University of Florida. Open to faculty and graduate students to support collaborative dh/ds research and practice, the Studio offers the technology necessary for users to make new intellectual contributions in their fields.
UF’s new nine-credit, interdisciplinary graduate certificate in DH provides students with a broad-based study of DH practices; an in-depth experience of DH within a specific discipline; and the opportunity, through its capstone studio course, to produce a portfolio tailored to the student’s own discipline and career goals.
The Florida Digital Humanities Consortium (FLDH) is a collective of institutions in the State of Florida that seeks to promote an understanding of the humanities in light of digital technologies and research.