
AHRC Arts and Humanities Research Council in UK is pleased to announce a call for participants to attend a workshop on “UK-Ireland Collaboration in the Digital Humanities”. The workshop will take place in Dublin, from 22-23 October and bring together leading experts from both countries to explore the current environment of digital humanities and opportunities for collaborative research between the UK and Ireland in the field.
The workshop will launch a new research programme focused on UK-Ireland collaboration in the Digital Humanities for which the AHRC has received funding from the UKRI Fund for International Collaboration. It will play a key role in informing the thematic priorities to be taken forward through the programme and embedded within future collaborative activity – it is anticipated that a number of funding calls informed by the workshop will be launched shortly afterwards.
The workshop and wider programme will be delivered in partnership with the Irish Research Council (IRC).
Expressions of interest to participate in the workshop are invited from UK-based researchers from HEIs and IROs who meet AHRC’s standard eligibility requirements.
Applicants should be able to demonstrate how their research interests support the vision and themes outlined in the guidance document. Deadline for applications: 26 September 2019.
EOI Application link: UK-Ireland Collaboration in the Digital Humanities- Workshop EoI form.
For more information: https://ahrc.ukri.org/funding/apply-for-funding/current-opportunities/uk-ireland-collaboration-in-the-digital-humanities-workshop-eoi-call/
















Much like scents, flavours and music, photographs are powerful triggers of memory. So what better medium to recall a past as recent and as visually recognizable as early postwar Europe…? For about a year, the consortium involved in the EU-funded project ‘Fifties in Europe Kaleidoscope’ has been diving into collections of libraries, archives and commercial agencies across Europe, to trace the tracks of the fifties in photography.
The article, written by Prof. Neil Forbes and Prof. Silvana Colella (both from Coventry University, REACH project coordinator and leader of the sustainability and resilience Work Package) went on-line last Saturday, in the Special Edition of the SCIRES-IT Journal titled “European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018. A laboratory for heritage-based innovation”.


































