An introduction to the informed and critical uses of the wealth of digitized and born-digital materials available in the Korean humanities. Participants will develop familiarity with the origins of digital Korean studies and the various ways that researchers create, analyze, visualize, interpret, and archive social and cultural artifacts in digital form. Topics include digital materiality, text mining, spatial and network visualization, and machine learning. Readings are in English and Korean. No background in programming or computer science is assumed.
For: Undergraduate and graduate: 15 participants
Lector: Javier Cha, Assistant Professor of Digital Humanities The University of Hong Kong
Date: 28.8.-1.9.2023 (intensive learning camp) + Webinars in Fall 2023