Institutes for Advanced Topics in the Digital Humanities
Funding Agency:
- National Endowment for the Humanities
The program supports national or regional (multistate) training programs for scholars, humanities professionals, and advanced graduate students to broaden and extend their knowledge of digital humanities. Through this program, NEH seeks to increase the number of humanities scholars and practitioners using digital technology in their research and to broadly disseminate knowledge about advanced technology tools and methodologies relevant to the humanities.
This program aims to bring together humanities scholars, advanced graduate students, librarians, archivists, museum staff, computer scientists, information specialists, and others to learn about new tools, approaches, and technologies, and to foster relationships for future collaborations in the humanities. NEH encourages you to develop proposals for multidisciplinary teams that include the necessary range of intellectual, technical, and practical expertise. You may draw partners and collaborators from outside of your institution, from the private and public sectors, and may include appropriate specialists from within and outside the United States. You should consider the practical applications of the institute topic and the ethical implications of its subject for humanities research, teaching, or public programming.
There is wide latitude in the content, form, and audiences of institutes. They may focus on a particular computational method, such as network or spatial analysis, or target the needs of a particular humanities discipline or audience. You could offer it only once or multiple times to different audiences or cohorts. They may be as short as a few days or as long as six weeks. You may host it at a single site, multiples sites, or virtually. The format and duration should allow for full and thorough treatment of the topic and be appropriate for the intended audience. The institute’s topic may be targeted for novice audiences or be for participants with some background and expertise in the proposed topic. All participants must be engaged in the same format simultaneously unless modifications are needed for accessibility accommodations.
Note about Humanities Perspectives on Artificial Intelligence
This grant program is one of the NEH programs that are part of NEH’s Humanities Perspectives on Artificial Intelligence initiative, which is encouraging research on the ethical, legal, and societal implications of AI. To learn more about the initiative, please see our page about the AI initiative.
Maximum award amount: $250,000
Optional draft due: December 12, 2024
February 13, 2025