DiSA is proud to announce the three inaugural recipients of the DiSA Digital Scholarship Incubator (DiSI), supported through a combination of funding and in-kind assistance.

(left) Associate Professor Ève Poudrier (Music) received the award for Encoding Francophone Folk Songs, using computer-assisted analysis to explore text-music interaction in 104 songs from Ernest Gagnon’s 1865 Chansons Populaires du Canada.
(centre) Associate Professor Markus Hallensleben (Central, Eastern, and Northern European Studies) interdisciplinary international project recenters Indigenous knowledges in the digitization and critical analysis of materials related to avant-garde artist Building a Decolonial Wolfgang Paalen Online Archive and Digital Edition through TEI.
(right) Assistant Professor Nicole Georgopulos (Art History, Visual Art and Theory) project National Identities and the Politics of Dislocation at the 1874 Exposition des Alsaciens-Lorrains, presents the first comprehensive history of this Parisian exhibition in an online database of approximately 1,200 objects .