A presentation and conversation with the Klezmer Institute’s Christina Crowder.
This talk will present two NEH-funded Digital Humanities initiatives of the Klezmer Institute: The Klezmer Archive Project, and the Kiselgof-Makonovetsky Digital Manuscript Project. These interlinked projects are using creative project design and novel technologies to center musicians and practitioners in the research process, and are developing groundbreaking tools for the documentation of heritage culture.
This program will be interesting for students in Jewish Studies, music and musicology, anthropology and folklore, and anyone interested in crowdsourcing methodologies and digital humanities.
Free admission, no registration required. Download flyer here.
The “Trampled Manuscripts" residency project is funded by a grant from the Center for Jewish Philanthropy of Greater Phoenix, with additional support from ASU Jewish Studies and the East Valley JCC.