BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:icalendar-ruby
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260609T130251Z
UID:e945cadb-6414-4380-aab5-d257d967fb8e
DTSTART;TZID=Canada/Eastern:20251112T120000
DTEND;TZID=Canada/Eastern:20251112T130000
DESCRIPTION:<html><ul><li>This event was exported from <a href="https://exp
 lora.alliancecan.ca/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><strong>Explora</stro
 ng></a></li><li>The content provider for this event is: <a href="https://e
 xplora.alliancecan.ca/content_providers/digital-research-alliance-of-canad
 a" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Digital Research Alliance of Canada</a><
 /li><li><strong>Registration may be required for the event</strong>\, plea
 se visit the following URL to learn more: <a href="https://engagedri-ca.zo
 om.us/webinar/register/WN__7RofUgeShSRuBHLXhCk5A" target="_blank" rel="noo
 pener">https://engagedri-ca.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN__7RofUgeShSRuBHLXh
 Ck5A</a></li></ul><hr><p>In December 2018\, the Internet Shakespeare Editi
 ons server failed. In April 2020\, the Shakespeare Quartos Archive was wit
 hdrawn from its Bodleian host. In October 2023\, the cyberattack on the Br
 itish Library obliterated the English Short Title Catalogue\, all the imag
 es in their digital collections (including those of the BL copies of Shake
 speare’s plays)\, and hundreds of scholarly resources. These high-profil
 e digital disasters are not isolated. About 80% of all the digital scholar
 ly projects created in the last thirty years have vanished without a trace
 \, leaving us with little to show for the public funding\, expertise\, and
  time that went into their making. Using the Internet Shakespeare Editions
  and its successor Linked Early Modern Drama Online as examples\, this pap
 er asks why digital projects have been so fragile\, how we can better sust
 ain them\, and what we need to do to ensure their longevity.</p><p>Speaker
 :<br>Janelle Jenstad is Professor of English and Academic Director of the 
 Humanities Computing and Media Centre at the University of Victoria (Canad
 a). She is the founding director of The Map of Early Modern London and Lin
 ked Early Modern Drama Online\, and the Co-Coordinating Editor of Digital 
 Renaissance Editions\, the New Internet Shakespeare Editions\, and the MoE
 ML Mayoral Shows anthology. She is a founding member of The Endings Projec
 t (endings.uvic.ca) and continues to advocate for Endings-Compliance in di
 gital scholarship. She co-edited Shakespeare’s Language in Digital Media
  (Routledge) and has published widely on book history\, digital humanities
 \, and early modern drama.</p></html>
SUMMARY:Digital Fragility\, Sustainability\, and Longevity\, or Whatever Ha
 ppened to the Internet Shakespeare Editions?
URL;VALUE=URI:https://engagedri-ca.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN__7RofUgeShSR
 uBHLXhCk5A
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
