<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title type="full"><title type="main">Data Art, Public Engagement, and Luso-Brazilian Literature and Culture</title><title type="sub">Reflections on the <em>Bird-watching</em> Exhibition</title></title></titleStmt><author><persName><surname>Enslen</surname><forename>Joshua Alma</forename></persName><affiliation>West Point, United States of America</affiliation><email>joshua.enslen@westpoint.edu</email></author><editionStmt><edition><date>43760</date></edition></editionStmt><publicationStmt><publisher>Name, Institution</publisher><address><addrLine>Street</addrLine><addrLine>City</addrLine><addrLine>Country</addrLine><addrLine>Name</addrLine></address></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><p>Converted from an OASIS Open Document</p></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><appInfo><application ident="DHCONVALIDATOR" version="1.22"><label>DHConvalidator</label></application></appInfo></encodingDesc><profileDesc><textClass><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="category"><term>Paper</term></keywords><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="subcategory"><term>Short Presentation</term></keywords><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="keywords"><term>Luso-Brazilian Literature and Culture</term><term>Public Humanities</term><term>Data Art</term><term>Text Mining</term><term>Network Analysis</term></keywords><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="topics"><term>South America</term><term>Comparative (2 or more geographical areas)</term><term>Europe</term><term>English</term><term>19th Century</term><term>20th Century</term><term>Contemporary</term><term>mixed-media analysis</term><term>text mining and analysis</term><term>Cultural studies</term><term>Literary studies</term></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><p>In line with DH2020&#8217;s focus on crossing paths, especially disciplinary ones, representations of indigenous (and other marginalized) perspectives in Brazil, and the possibilities of engagement proposed by public digital humanities initiatives, this paper will discuss the challenges and opportunities presented by the Bird-watching exhibition, an interdisciplinary and artisanal middle-ground where museum-goers were invited to critically examine Brazilian society through the lens of its most imitated poem.</p></body></text></TEI>