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On *Wednesday, February 26, 2020 at 12 p.m. in the Digital Scholarship Lab
at the Rockefeller Library*, John Laudon, PhD will give a talk, “‘Are We
Not Doing Phrasing Anymore?’: Towards a Cultural Informatics.” Organized by
the Data Science Initiative
<https://www.brown.edu/initiatives/data-science/home> and the Library's
Center for Digital Scholarship <https://library.brown.edu/create/cds/>.

Free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.

More information <https://blogs.brown.edu/libnews/john-laudun/>
“Are We Not Doing Phrasing Anymore?: Towards a Cultural Informatics

Recent headlines reveal the profound suspicion with which statistical
methods have been received within the humanities. The pervasive belief is
that a chasm lies between statistics and the humanities that not only
cannot be bridged but should not be attempted, at the risk of losing the
human. And yet slowly and steadily, a growing number of practitioners have
not only developed research programs but also pedagogical methods that open
up new analytical perspectives as well as new avenues for students to
explore their relationship between the subject matter and their own
understanding.

This talk offers a small survey of various practices to be found in the
digital humanities alongside a few experiments by the author in allowing
students to experience how statistical methods in fact demystify the
meaning-making process in language and empower students not only to ground
their insights in things they can see and count, but also in understanding
texts as nothing more than certain sequences of words, opening a path to
making them better writers as well.

Working from a broad survey to narrow applications, the talk suggests that
concerns about a loss of humanity in the humanities is actually a concern
for loss of certain kinds of authority, but that new kinds of authority are
possible within which researchers and teachers will find a firm ground from
which to offer interpretations and evaluations of the kinds of complex
artifacts that have long been the purview of the domain.
John Laudun, PhD

John Laudun received his MA in literary studies from Syracuse University in
1989 and his PhD in folklore studies from the Folklore Institute at Indiana
University in 1999. He was a Jacob K. Javits Fellow while at Syracuse and
Indiana (1987 – 1992), and a MacArthur Scholar at the Indiana Center for
Global Change and World Peace (1993 – 1994). He has written grants that
have been funded by the Grammy Foundation and the Louisiana Board of
Regents, been a fellow with the EVIA Digital Archive, and a scholar in
residence with UCLA’s Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics. His
book, *The
Amazing Crawfish Boat*, is a longitudinal ethnographic study of creativity
and tradition within a material folk culture domain.

Laudun’s current work is in the realm of culture analytics. He is engaged
in several collaborations with physicists and other scientists seeking to
understand how texts can be modeled computationally in order to better
describe functions and features.

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