DHSI-East 2026: Tuesday May 5th to Friday May 8th 2026
Join us in person Tuesday, May 5th to Friday, May 8th 2026, at St Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, Nova Scotia for DHSI-East. Hosted by St. Francis Xavier University's Digital Humanities Centre. Faculty, staff, students, and all interested welcome.
Register for DHSI-East 2026 Apply for Accommodation Grant
Participants will be able to choose one of three workshop options this year:
- Project Management in the Humanities
- Research Data Management for Humanities Researchers
- Digital Publishing in the Humanities Classroom
These workshops run concurrently over four days, so it is not possible to attend them all.
Workshop Option 1: "Project Management in the Humanities"
Instructor: Dr. Jennifer Guiliano, Professor of History, Indiana University
This workshop will explore the fundamentals of project planning and design including, but not limited to: formulating appropriate disciplinary questions for digital humanities research, investigating digital humanities tools and resources, structuring your first project, critical path scheduling, understanding roles and responsibilities, risk management, documenting your project work, writing your first grant proposal, budget setting and controls, building the project team, and selecting and implementing project management tools and software. This is an advanced workshop and, as such, you are expected to have an understanding of the definition of digital humanities. Materials will be covered through lectures, discussions, presentations, and hands-on activities. Participants will get the most of the workshop if they arrive with at least some sense of a potential digital humanities project that they would like to develop throughout the workshop.
Max Participants: 15
Workshop Option 2: "Research Data Management for Humanities Researchers"
Instructors:
Shahira Khair, University of Victoria Libraries
Sandra Sawchuck, Mount Saint Vincent Libraries
This intensive four-day hands-on workshop is designed for humanities researchers who want to actively apply best practices in research data management in their own research projects. Recognizing the unique and diverse nature of humanities data—from digitized texts and images, to audio recordings and cultural artifacts—the workshop provides practical, actionable strategies across the entire research data lifecycle, from initial planning to long-term preservation and reuse.
This is a “bring your own data” workshop! Participants should arrive with the research materials they are seeking help in managing. This can be from an existing project or one you are just embarking on! (And we can point you in some directions if you are looking for data!)
Participants will gain proficiency in developing comprehensive Data Management Plans (DMPs), essential for navigating funder requirements (e.g. SSHRC, NEH) and streamlining project workflows. Through practical exercises, the curriculum emphasizes effective organization and documentation of research materials, use of software for analysis and automation, and the critical role of metadata in ensuring data discoverability and long-term reusability. Sessions will cover secure storage solutions and long-term preservation techniques to safeguard valuable research materials.
A significant focus is placed on the ethical dimensions inherent in many research areas in the humanities, addressing sensitive data, informed consent, use of AI, and the crucial principles of cultural sensitivity and Indigenous data sovereignty. The workshop also guides researchers through strategic data sharing by exploring appropriate repositories (disciplinary and generalist), applying robust curation practices, and navigating licensing and persistent identifiers to maximize research impact and compliance with evolving funder and publisher requirements. Upon completion, attendees will be empowered to confidently manage, preserve, and ethically share their research, enhancing the integrity, accessibility, and scholarly impact of their work.
Max Participants: 25
Workshop Option 3: "Digital Publishing in the Humanities Classroom"
Instructors:
Dr. Andie Silva, Professor of English (York College) and Digital Humanities (CUNY Graduate Center)
zelda montes, CUNY Graduate Center
This workshop will explore best practices for immersing students in archival, editorial, and analytical practices that privilege agency, self-discovery, and research-driven writing. Using approaches and tools such as TEI, Scalar, and Hypothesis, we will discuss how to scope, support, and evaluate projects that incorporate digital publishing into a variety of teaching environments. Discussion will be oriented around how to approach public-facing student projects in ways that are mindful of ethical, privacy, and accessibility considerations. Participants will collaborate on designing and scaffolding assignments, consider methods for assessment, and collectively build a repository of resources, links, and prompts.
Max Participants: 25
Keynote Lecture: “‘Show Your Work’: Linking, Platforming, and Deplatforming for the Future of Born-Digital Scholarship”
7 May 2026 from 4pm-5pm.
Dr. Susan Brown, University of Guelph
As we absorb the magnitude of detrimental effects--personal, environment, economic, and ethical--of web platforms and black-box technologies, we must consider the implications of digital research infrastructure for the humanities. The minimal computing movement's regard for global economic disparity advocates static web sites over platforms. Enthusiasm for static sites has only grown as the challenges of sustaining born-digital websites have become increasingly evident. As DH increasingly goes static, the FAIR data principles for research data as linked open data are vital to ensuring that sites are Findable and Accessible as well as Interoperable and Reusable. However, the infrastructure that supports FAIR data assumes static or print-legacy data, rather than living knowledge online. From a data feminist standpoint, this talk explores tensions arising within the infrastructural landscape for born-digital scholarship considering labour, ethics, sustainability, and the impacts of openness in a knowledge environment dominated by AI.
This keynote is free and open to the public.
Registration
| Registration Type | Early Bird Pricing (until 15 MAR 2026) | Regular Pricing (after 15 MAR 2026) |
| Regular | $600 CAD | $700 CAD |
| StFX Faculty/Staff, Graduate Students, Unemployed, Low-wage | $300 CAD | $400 CAD |
| Undergraduate Student | $50 CAD | $100 CAD |
Staying in Antigonish
Please visit the Visit Antigonish website to see a list of all Accommodation in the area.
Travel to Antigonish
Please note that Antigonish is not near any major airports and it is up to participants to book their own travel. The closest airport is the Halifax airport (YHZ), which is about two hours' drive from Antigonish.
Travel options from the airport include:
- the Maritime Bus (leaves from Halifax airport to Antigonish once a day, 3:50pm departure)
- Ridebooker Shuttle (leaves from Halifax airport to Antigonish once a day, 2:00pm departure)
- Island Shuttle (departing Halifax between 12:30-1:30)
- Ceilidh Shuttle (departing Halifax between 10:30-noon)
- Shuttle 24
- Premier Car Service
- rental cars (multiple companies available)
DHSI-East 2026 Accommodation Grant
Accommodation grants are available to help subsidize the cost of attending DHSI-East 2026 for the following participants:
- Undergraduate and graduate students
- BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour) participants
- Under-employed participants (including those who are unemployed or employed in precarious and/or under-waged positions)
Application deadline: 28 Feb 2026
Number of grants available: 12
Accommodation Grant Includes
- Accommodation at the StFX Hotel in Antigonish, Nova Scotia, for the duration of DHSI-East (approx. 5 nights)
- A discounted DHSI-East registration rate of $150
Costs Not Covered by the Grant
- Travel to and from Antigonish, Nova Scotia
- Payment of the remaining registration fee required to confirm attendance.
- Any additional expenses incurred during their attendance.
Conditions
- Accommodation is provided exclusively at the StFX Hotel.
- No alternative accommodations or reimbursements are available if a recipient chooses not to stay at the StFX Hotel.
- No alternative reimbursements will be made available if the recipient chooses to not take advantage of the registration discount.
- Registration fee payment is required in full before the accommodation grant is secured.
- If a recipient declines the grant or does not confirm attendance by the stated deadline, the grant may be reallocated to the next eligible applicant.
Evaluation Criteria
- The applicant meets one or more of the stated eligibility categories (student, BIPOC participant, or under-employed participant).
- The applicant has confirmed that they are able to attend DHSI-East for the full duration if awarded a grant.
- Priority will be given to applicants currently residing in Canada.
- Priority will be given to applicants who have not previously received a DHSI-East accommodation or travel grant.
- The applicant's attendance at DHSI-East is relevant to their teaching, learning, or professional practice.
- Grants are awarded subject to the number of available grants and accommodation capacity.
These accommodation grants are made possible through the support of SSHRC, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
Canadian Certificate in Digital Humanities
DHSI-East can count towards The Canadian Certificate in Digital Humanities/Certificat canadien en Humanités Numériques(24 workshop hours). For more information on the certificate, please see the website: ccdhhn.ca.
Credits
DHSI-East is part of the international DH Training Network and takes its name from DHSI, the Digital Humanities Summer Institute (University of Victoria). DHSI-East is supported by funding from the Canada Research Chairs program.
This event and the travel grants are made possible by SSHRC, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
The DHSI-East 2026 organizing team is Laura Estill (English, StFX), Margaret Vail (StFX, Librarian), Meghan Landry (ACENET), and Abby Ives (StFX student research assistant).
For information on past DHSI-East training events, see our archive page.
Contact
408 Nicholson Tower
2329 Notre Dame Avenue
Antigonish NS B2G 2W5
Canada
