The Digital Medievalist Community of Practice
(http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/) is sponsoring two sessions at the
Forty-Fifth International Congress on Medieval Studies, May 7-10,
2009. See below for session names and descriptions.
Please send inquiries and abstracts for 20-minute presentations to
Peter Robinson at p.m.robinson(a)bham.ac.uk. Abstracts must be attached
to a Participant Information Form, available in both MS Word and PDF
formats from the Congress website:
http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/submissions/index.html#PIF.
Proposals must be submitted by September 15, 2009.
Paper session: The state of the art in handwriting recognition and
analysis for medieval documents
Much work has been done towards automated analysis of handwritten
documents, with a focus on handwriting recognition, in the last years,
and some of the developments seen in OCR and layout recognition
systems may be applicable to medieval studies. Further, the
increasing interest in sophisticated linkages of text and image might
be enhanced by developments in handwriting recognition and analysis.
We welcome papers which report on work done or ongoing in these areas,
or which seek to establish methodologies.
Paper session: Collaborative tools and environments for medieval
scholarship
Many groups around the world are working to develop a new generation
of collaborative tools and research environments, with potential wide
applicability to medieval studies. This leads to questions about the
nature of collaboration itself, and about useful models of
collaboration. Reports form the coal face on collaborations which
have, or have not, worked are welcome, as are demonstrations of tools
and ruminations on the many faces of collaboration.
Again, please send inquiries and abstracts for 20-minute presentations
to Peter Robinson at p.m.robinson(a)bham.ac.uk. Abstracts must be
attached to a Participant Information Form, available in both MS Word
and PDF formats from the Congress website:
http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/submissions/index.html#PIF.
Peter Robinson
Institute for Textual Scholarship and Electronic Editing
Elmfield House, Selly Oak Campus
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston B29 6LG
P.M.Robinson(a)bham.ac.uk
p. +44 (0)121 4158441, f. +44 (0) 121 415 8376
www.itsee.bham.ac.uk
>> There's a project that does exactly this at Nijmegen based Radboud
University (The Netherlands). Info (didn't check if there's an English
translation) and links at
http://www.ru.nl/wetenschapsagenda/editie_19_-_17_juni/vm/jaargang_3/beeld_…
Thank you!
I don't see any transcriptions here, however. Or was the original manuscript
in Dutch?
I attended this last year and it was fabulous!
Dot
*************
2nd Annual Lawrence J. Schoenberg Symposium on Manuscript Studies in
the Digital Age
October 30-31, 2009
Lex scripta: The Manuscript as Witness to the History of Law
In partnership with the Rare Book Department of the Free Library of
Philadelphia and the Biddle Law Library of the University of
Pennsylvania, Penn Libraries are pleased to announce the 2nd annual
Lawrence J. Schoenberg Symposium on Manuscript Studies in the Digital
Age. This year's symposium is dedicated to the history of handwritten
law and legal documents in Western Europe and the Middle East up to
the early modern period in honor of the 100th anniversary of the death
of Henry Charles Lea, whose library containing a significant
collection of works on ecclesiastical legal history was conveyed to
the University in 1926.
Nine speakers will present papers on various topics relating to the
history of handwritten law and legal documents. The symposium will
conclude with a panel of digital humanities scholars who will discuss
specific projects and issues related to the digitization of legal
manuscripts and documents.
Participants include:
* Jonathan E. Brockopp, Penn State University
* Hugh Cayless, New York University
* Simon Corcoran, Projet Volterra, University College London
* Gero Dolezalek, University of Aberdeen
* Abigail Firey, University of Kentucky
* Jessica Goldberg, University of Pennsylvania
* Kathleen E. Kennedy, Penn State University-Brandywine
* Susan L'Engle, Vatican Film Library, St. Louis University
* Kenneth Pennington, Catholic University
* Edward Peters, University of Pennsylvania
* Timothy Stinson, North Carolina State University
* Georg Vogeler, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich
* Anders Winroth, Yale University
The symposium will be held at the University of Pennsylvania and the
Central Branch of the Free Library of Philadelphia. For locations,
schedule, and program details:
http://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/lectures/ljs_symposium2_program.html
Registration is $35 (Free to students with valid student ID). To
register: http://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/lectures/ljs_symposium.html
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Dot Porter (MA, MSLS) Metadata Manager
Digital Humanities Observatory (RIA), Regus House, 28-32 Upper
Pembroke Street, Dublin 2, Ireland
-- A Project of the Royal Irish Academy --
Phone: +353 1 234 2444 Fax: +353 1 234 2400
http://dho.ie Email: dot.porter(a)gmail.com
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[apologies for cross-posting, please forward]
TILE: Text-Image Linking Environment is pleased to announce the launch
of its public blog and informational site:
http://tileproject.org
Our first blog posting includes a description of anticipated TILE
functionality.
http://mith.info/tile/2009/07/20/welcome/
Upcoming posts will include an invitation to participate in user
testing, as well as announcements of software as it becomes available.
Visit often, or subscribe to the RSS feed for the latest news on TILE.
http://mith.info/tile/feed/
TILE is a collaborative project between the Maryland Institute for
Technology in the Humanities (MITH), Digital Humanities Observatory
(DHO), and Indiana University Bloomington, funded through a major
grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities Preservation and
Access: Humanities Collections and Resources program (research and
development focus). Over two years TILE will develop a new web-based,
modular, collaborative image markup tool for both manual and
semi-automated linking between encoded text and image of text, and
image annotation.
The project is unusual in digital humanities tools development in that
it is being designed from the start to support a wide variety of use
cases. Several projects from the University of Indiana Bloomington,
The University of Oregon and Harvard's Center for Hellenic Studies are
initial testbeds. In the second year of the project, TILE will turn to
the user community for testing. If you are interested in
participating, or in learning more about the project, please contact
us at TILEPROJECT(a)listserv.heanet.ie.
--
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
Dot Porter (MA, MSLS) Metadata Manager
Digital Humanities Observatory (RIA), Regus House, 28-32 Upper
Pembroke Street, Dublin 2, Ireland
-- A Project of the Royal Irish Academy --
Phone: +353 1 234 2444 Fax: +353 1 234 2400
http://dho.ie Email: dot.porter(a)gmail.com
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