Mapping Manuscript Migrations: Digging Into Data For The History And Provenance Of Pre-Modern European Manuscripts
Hundreds of thousands of pre-modern European manuscripts have survived until the present day. As the result of changes in their ownership over the centuries, they are now spread all over the world. Collectively they constitute a great cultural and scholarly treasure. There are many sources of data relating to them, and new sources continue to proliferate in the digital environment. This project will link disparate datasets from Europe and North America to provide an international view of the history and provenance of these manuscripts. The aggregated data will enable researchers to analyse and visualize these topics at scales ranging from individual manuscripts to thousands of manuscripts. Our research will address their origins and movements, and the collectors and owners involved in their history. We will be able to show how these manuscripts have traveled across time and space to their current locations, where they continue to find new audiences.
The project will run from 2017 to 2019, as part of the Digging into Data Challenge, which is funded by 16 funding bodies in 11 countries through the Trans-Atlantic Platform.
The Principal Investigators are:
Toby Burrows, University of Oxford, United Kingdom, AHRC/ESRC
Eero Hyvönen, Aalto University, Finland, AKA
Lynn Ransom, University of Pennsylvania, United States, IMLS
Hanno Wijsman, Institut de recherche et d'histoire des textes, France, ANR
https://diggingintodata.org/awards/2016/project/mapping-manuscript-migratio…
** With apologies for cross-posting **
*Expectations of Digital (Textual) Editions: A Short Questionnaire (20
questions, 15 minutes max).*
Do you use and/or build digital (textual) editions? If so, please
consider filling-in this short questionnaire, which aims at collecting
information about what users expect or want from a digital edition.
*QUESTIONNAIRE URL*: https://opinio.ucl.ac.uk/s?s=48797
The questions build upon the feature list provided by the /Catalogue of
Digital Editions/ [https://github.com/gfranzini/digEds_cat and
https://dig-ed-cat.eos.arz.oeaw.ac.at/], and the answers obtained from
this questionnaire will be examined against the editions currently
contained in the /Catalogue/. The information you provide will help us
compare the user needs of the community with the digital editions that
have been built by the community.
*The questionnaire contains 20 questions and is completely anonymous. We
don’t ask for demographic information such as age, gender, ethnicity or
religion. *
The compiled results of the survey will be made available online via the
/Catalogue of Digital Editions/ websites and the questionnaire's
institutional address (University College London). They will also be
discussed in Greta Franzini's PhD thesis.
The questionnaire should take *no more than 15 minutes to complete and
closes on 30th April 2017*. Please share it with colleagues and friends
who might be able to contribute!
For further information about this questionnaire or about how the data
will be used, please contact Greta Franzini at g.franzini.11(AT)ucl.ac.uk
Thank you very much for taking time to fill-in this questionnaire. We
truly value the information you provide.
Greta Franzini, Prof. Melissa Terras and Simon Mahony
--
Greta Franzini MPhil CELTA
PhD Student
UCL Centre for Digital Humanities
Department of Information Studies
University College London
Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT
Country of residence: Germany
Email: g.franzini.11(a)ucl.ac.uk
Twitter: @GretaFranzini
UCL profile: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/dis/people/gretafranzini
ResearchGate: www.researchgate.net/profile/Greta_Franzini
Dear Colleagues,
The abstracts and proposals to the Aliento International Conference
should be sent to us by March 30, 2017. We hope to see you then.
Sincerely
Marie-Sol Ortola
Professeur des Universités (Univ. Lorraine, Nancy 2)
Dépt d’études ibériques et ibéro-américaines
LIS (Littératures, Imaginaire, Sociétés, EA 7035)
Porteur du projet ANR ALIENTO
www.aliento.eu
00 33 (0) 3 83 73 83 01
marie-sol.ortola(a)univ-lorraine.fr <mailto:marie-sol.ortola@univ-lorraine.fr>
Marie-Christine Bornes Varol
Professeur des Universités (Inalco)
Département d’études hébraïques
CERMOM
Porteur du projet ANR ALIENTO
www.aliento.eu
00 33 (0) 1 40 05 98 83
varol(a)noos.fr
*Global Digital Humanities Symposium*
*March 16-17, 2017*
Union Building, Lake Huron Room
Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan
http://msuglobaldh.org/
*The event will be livestreamed at go.cal.msu.edu/globaldh
<http://go.cal.msu.edu/globaldh>.*
Follow along on social media at #msuglobaldh
Digital Humanities at Michigan State University is proud to continue its
symposium series on Global DH into its second year. We are delighted to
feature speakers from outside of the area as well as expertise and work
from faculty at Michigan State University in this two day symposium.
*Schedule*
Thursday, March 16, 2017
- 12:00-12:30 - Opening Remarks
- 12:30-2:30 - Lightning Talk Session
- 2:45-3:45 - Cultural Memory, Identities, and Social Justice
- Shifting Representations of Zulu Identities, from Analog to Digital,
Liz Timbs, MSU
- Humanizing Data –or- DH against archival violences, Anelise Hanson
Shrout, Cal State Fullerton
- Witnessing Hate: Case Studies in Data, Documentation, and Social
Justice, Andrea Ledesma, Brown
- 4:00-5:00 - De-coding and re-coding literary canons
- Forgetting the Famines: the Kiplings and their Indian Interlocutors,
Amardeep Singh, Lehigh University
- Retelling the Story of Okonkwo: A Digital exploration of the Clash
of Cultures in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, Tunde Opeibi,
University
of Lagos, Nigeria
- Towards a Platform for Studying and Analyzing Chinese Poetry,
Chao-Lin Liu, Harvard
- 5:15-6:45 - ARC Panel: Access, Data, and Collaboration in the Global
Digital Humanities
<http://www.msuglobaldh.org/uncategorized/announcing-advanced-research-conso…>
Friday, March 17, 2017
- 9:00-10:00 - Keynote: Elizabeth LaPensee, MSU
- 10:15-11:15 - Reconfiguring Narrative: Connectivities in Literary and
Game Studies
- Contending with Hegemonies, Exploring Linkages and Possibilities of
Assertions in the Global South: A Study through Role Playing Computer
Games, Siddhartha Chakraborti, Aligarh Muslim University
- Hacking "el sistema": Digital Hyper-Punk Fiction in Latin America,
Eduardo Ledesma, UIUC
- Annotation, Bibliography, and Networks: Systems of Textual
Classification for Premodern Chinese Texts, Evan Nicoll-Johnson, UCLA
- 11:30-12:30 - Mapping and 3D Environments
- Boundary-work: mapping borders, edges, and margins in “Fortress
Europe, Dimitris Papadopoulos, Western Michigan
- The $500 Challenge: 3D Modeling of Heritage Structures in
Endangered or Developing Areas, William Spates, Birla Institute of
Technology and Science, KK Birla Goa Campus
- (lunch and workshop - not live-streamed)
- 4:15-5:15 - Imagining the Past, Present, and Future of Digital
Humanities(or Defining Digital Humanities: The Political and Ethical Stakes)
- Archival Emanations and Contrapuntal Transformations: Digital Cultural
Productions in Post-1965 Indonesia, Viola Lasmana, University of Southern
California
- Gaps and Silences: A Case Study in Web Archiving Diverse Content,
Sigrid Anderson Cordell, Catherine Morse, Jo Angela Oehrli, Juli McLoone,
Meredith Kahn, Michigan
- Afrolatin@ Digital Humanities: Complex Global Interconections in
Search of Social Justice, Eduard Arriaga, University of Indianapolis
- 5:30-6:30 - Closing remarks and Keynote: Padmini Ray Murray, Srishti
School of Art, Design and Technology
Kristen Mapes
Digital Humanities Coordinator
College of Arts and Letters
Michigan State University
kristenmapes.com
kmapes(a)msu.edu
kmapes86(a)gmail.com
Summer school: « Le livre médiéval au regard des méthodes quantitatives »
A summer school on the study of medieval books with quantitative methods will take place in Paris from the 12th to the 16th of June 2017. It is organized by the Lamop (Université Paris I), the IRHT, the Ecole nationale des Chartes and the University of Namur.
During one week, participants will have the opportunity to learn about the use of quantitative methods in medieval book studies and to practice them with the best specialists.
The full program and the application form can be found on http://lamop.univ-paris1.fr/menu-haut/seminaires/francois-foronda/#c628055. The deadline for application is April the 13th.
Conferences and workshops will be in french. Registration is free of charge ; a few bursaries for travel and accomodation will be given depending on individual situations and needs.
Octave Julien
Docteur en histoire
Enseignant-chercheur (Pireh / Lamop)
This might interest the digital medievalist community as well:
-------- Weitergeleitete Nachricht --------
Betreff: CO:OPyright. Challenges and Practices of Copyright and
Licensing of Digital Cultural Heritage (April 12 & 13, University of
Graz, AT)
Datum: Tue, 14 Mar 2017 07:37:33 +0000
Von: Kerstin Muff <kerstin.muff(a)icar-us.eu>
An: info(a)icar-us.eu <info(a)icar-us.eu>
Dear colleagues,
please be kindly invited to the conference
CO:OPyright. Challenges and Practices of Copyright and Licensing of
Digital Cultural Heritage
April 12 & 13, 2017
University of Graz, RESOWI (Universitätsstraße 15)
http://informationsmodellierung.uni-graz.at/de/veranstaltungen/coopyright/
The conference is hosted by the Centre for Information Modelling -
Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities and the Institute of the
Foundations of Law, Section 'Law and ICT' at the University of Graz
(Austria).
In the age of digital information technology and the constant
availability of information through the Internet, it is not only
important to have democratic access to knowledge, but also essential to
consider the potential that lies in the critical production and
expansion of knowledge.
The CO:OP project - short for Community as Opportunity: the creative
archives' and users' network<http://coop-project.eu/> - co-funded by the
Creative Europe programme of the European Union aims to strengthen and
promote the co-operation between institutions preserving our common
cultural heritage and the general public.
Of particular interest and concern to cultural heritage institutions are
issues of copyright on, provision of and access to digitized material.
There is a recognizable political drive in the European Union to
facilitate public access to cultural heritage - and data in general -
hosted at public institutions. However, the lack of legal harmonization
and the often unclear national legislations on the use and provision of
resources by public cultural heritage or scientific institutions has
been prohibiting a much broader engagement between the general public
and its own cultural heritage.
The conference includes three pre-conference workshops and a full day of
presentations by both legal experts and cultural heritage experts.
Please find the detailed programme in the attached PDF or online at
http://informationsmodellierung.uni-graz.at/de/veranstaltungen/coopyright/
Participation in the Conference and the Workshops is FREE, but
registration is required. Please register at:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/challenges-and-practices-of-copyright-and-lice…
Cheerio,
Kerstin Muff
Mag. Kerstin Muff
Project Management / Editor-in-chief "insights"
ICARUS - International Centre for Archival Research
Erdberger Laende 6/7
A - 1030 Vienna
Tel./Fax: +43 (0)1 / 545 0 989
E-Mail: kerstin.muff(a)icar-us.eu<mailto:kerstin.muff@icar-us.eu>, Web:
www.icar-us.eu<http://www.icar-us.eu/>
--
-------------------------------------
Professor Dr. Georg Vogeler
Chair for Digital Humanities
Zentrum für Informationsmodellierung -
Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities
Universität Graz
A-8010 Graz | Elisabethstraße 59/III
Tel. +43 316 380 8033
<http://informationsmodellierung.uni-graz.at> - <http://gams.uni-graz.at>
Institut für Dokumentologie und Editorik e.V. <http://www.i-d-e.de>
International Center for Archival Research ICARus <http://www.icar-us.eu>
--
-------------------------------------
Professor Dr. Georg Vogeler
Chair for Digital Humanities
Zentrum für Informationsmodellierung -
Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities
Universität Graz
A-8010 Graz | Elisabethstraße 59/III
Tel. +43 316 380 8033
<http://informationsmodellierung.uni-graz.at> - <http://gams.uni-graz.at>
Institut für Dokumentologie und Editorik e.V. <http://www.i-d-e.de>
International Center for Archival Research ICARus <http://www.icar-us.eu>
Reminder: application deadline approaching!
__
MAKE _YOUR_ EDITION: MODELS AND METHODS FOR DIGITAL TEXTUAL SCHOLARSHIP
Call for applications: Summer 2017 NEH Institute for Advanced Topics in
the Digital Humanities
DEADLINES: Applications are due Tuesday, February 28, 2017. Applicants
will be notified of acceptance by March 15, 2017.
INSTITUTE DATES: July 10-29, 2017
Synopsis
The University of Pittsburgh is pleased to invite applications to an NEH
Advanced Institute in the Digital Humanities for summer 2017 entitled
_Make YOUR edition: models and methods of digital textual scholarship_.
The target audience for this workshop is digital textual scholars who
are already comfortable editing their texts (in TEI XML or comparable
alternatives); the goal of the Institute is to assist them in moving
beyond textual editing to imagining, creating, and publishing
research-driven, theoretically and methodologically innovative digital
editions.
Rationale
Digital humanists already have access to workshops and tutorials to help
them learn to transcribe, edit, and tag a text in preparation for
publishing a digital edition. These training resources play a vital role
in empowering editors to formalize and instantiate their interpretations
as markup, so as to make them available for subsequent analysis.
Nonetheless, sophisticated markup expertise alone is not enough to make
an edition, and learning nothing more than tagging may leave scholars
staring at their angle brackets and wondering what to do next. For some
a solution like TEI Tapas provides an adequate next step, but for those
who wish to ask new types of questions of their documents, and to
produce new types of editions that enable new types of research, an
understanding of how to turn a set of tagged texts into a customized
edition that meets individualized research goals is crucial. Digital
humanists cannot build editions that break new methodological ground
solely on the basis of solutions prepared largely by others, and the
focus of this Institute is on the creation of digital editions motivated
by project-specific research questions and implemented from a
perspective driven first by theory of edition, second by editorial
methodology, and necessarily but less importantly by specific toolkits.
In this respect we foreground not learning a particular programming
language or technology or framework, but learning to think and act
digitally about the process of creating a digital edition. Because tools
and technologies come and go, the Institute emphasizes learning to
translate original digital thinking about editions into implementations
of those editions, rather than on ³tooling up² in the context of
currently popular frameworks. In this respect, the Institute recognizes
thinking digitally in ways driven by project-specific research goals as
the most important feature of _sustainable Digital Humanities training
and education_.
Program
The Institute will introduce textual and manuscript scholars to a
powerful and broad-reaching skill set of digital methods and
technologies, grounded in a context that prioritizes a research-driven
theory of edition. The course moves in a three-week succession from
novice to experienced level, and from base textual data to full digital
publication of scholarly editions. The Institute assumes that
participants will have meaningful prior experience in digital editing
(in TEI XML or a comparable framework), but it makes no other
assumptions about prior knowledge or skills.
- An optional first-week _boot camp_ establishes basic infrastructure
skills (operating comfortably at the command line, handling files,
navigating file systems, sharing resources and code responsibly,
running Python programs from the command line, etc.).
- The second week allows participants to practice and advance their
basic skills when they start combining digital textual scholarship
theory (e.g., McGann 20041, Andrews 20122, Siemens 20123, Robinson
20134, Haentjens et al. 20155) with standard (e.g., XML, Python,
Jupyter Notebooks) and advanced digital technologies (e.g.,
StemmaWeb, CollateX, Neo4j, Tinkerpop, eXist-db).
- By the end of the third week, participants will be able to
conceptualize from theory a perspective on digital textual
scholarship and digital scholarly editions. They will also know how
to go about planning and implementing such an edition by engaging
programmatically and algorithmically with digital data, handling it
computationally, and querying, analyzing, and transforming it into
visualizations that transcend the digital translation of a text as a
codex.
The Institute will meet at the main (Oakland) campus of the University
of Pittsburgh from Monday, July 10, 2017 through Friday, July 28, 2017
and will draw on an international faculty of distinguished scholars,
practitioners, and teachers of digital philology from several
collaborating institutions. On Saturday, July 29, 2017 there will be an
optional pedagogical review of the Institute, designed to assist
participants in organizing and conducting their own workshops at their
home institutions.
Instructors
- Tara Andrews (Institute of History, University of Vienna)
- David J. Birnbaum (Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures,
University of Pittsburgh)
- Hugh Cayless (Duke Collaboratory for Classics Computing [DC3], Duke
University)
- Ronald Haentjens Dekker (Huygens Institute, Royal Netherlands
Academy of Arts and Sciences)
- Na-Rae Han (Department of Linguistics, University of Pittsburgh)
- Mike Kestemont (Department of Literature, University of Antwerp)
- Leif-Jöran Olsson (Department of Swedish Language, University of
Gothenburg)
The instructors will be assisted by:
- Gabrielle (Gabi) Keane (Senior Undergraduate Institute Assistant,
University of Pittsburgh)
- Kaylen Sanders (Junior Undergraduate Institute Assistant, University
of Pittsburgh)
Details
Applications are invited for the full three-week Institute or, in the
case of those who are already comfortable with the types of first-week
topics described above, for just the second and third weeks. Applicants
should already be proficient with digital textual editing in TEI XML or
similar technologies, and should be seeking guidance and training in how
to move their texts into innovative digital editions that will enable
them to explore project-specific research questions. Evidence of
meaningful prior hands-on digital textual editing experience is
required, but prior experience in programming for textual exploration
and publication is not. Applicants who do not have prior experience with
the Python programming language must agree to complete a recommended
free online introductory Python course before the beginning of the
Institute, for which the Institute will maintain its own support and
discussion board. For budgetary reasons, preference will be given to
applications from within North America.
Participants accepted to the Institute will receive a travel allowance,
complimentary accommodation in single-occupancy dormitory rooms, and a
complimentary meal plan in the University Dining Services in lieu of per
diem. Access to the University libraries, computer labs, and networked
digital resources will also be provided. Participants must bring their
own laptops (Windows 710, Mac OS, or Ubuntu/Debian Linux). We welcome
scholars at all career levels from advanced graduate students through
senior faculty. Applications to the Institute should include the
following:
- A one- to two-page statement about how participation in the
Institute will enhance the scholarly and professional goals of the
applicant. This statement should describe the digital edition
project that the applicant plans to pursue or undertake, with
special attention to the research questions motivating the creation
of that edition. Preference will be shown to applications that
articulate a clear understanding of the textual research potential
of digital scholarly editions.
- A one-page description of the applicant¹s experience with textual
editing. Prior experience in programming for text processing is
neither required nor expected, but those who have such experience
should describe it here.
- Brief CV (maximum of two pages), concentrating on textual editing
and Digital Humanities experience.
- Indicate whether you are applying for the full three weeks or only
for the second and third, and in the latter case please describe
your background in the areas related to those described above as
part of the ³boot camp² week.
- Indicate whether you wish to participate in the optional one-day
pedagogical review of the course on Saturday, July 29.
- Participants are required to participate full-time in the Institute
for the two or three weeks that they are in residence, and must
confirm that they will not undertake other significant commitments
during the Institute period.
All application materials should be submitted by email as a single PDF
file to djbpitt+neh(a)pitt.edu. The deadline for applications is Tuesday,
February 28, 2017, and applicants will be notified by March 15, 2017.
Questions may be directed to djbpitt+neh(a)pitt.edu.
David J. Birnbaum, Institute Director
Professor and Chair, Slavic Languages and Literatures
Faculty Fellow, University Honors College
Email: djbpitt+neh(a)pitt.edu
_____
References
1. McGann, Jerome, 2004. ³Marking texts of many dimensions.² In Susan
Schreibman, Raymond Siemens, and John Unsworth, eds. _A companion to
Digital Humanities_. Oxford: Blackwell.
2. Andrews, Tara L., 2012. ³The third way: philology and critical
edition in the digital age.² _Variants_ 10, pp. 6176.
3. Siemens, Raymond et al., 2012. ³Toward modeling the social edition:
An approach to understanding the electronic scholarly edition in the
context of new and emerging social media.² _Literary and linguistic
computing_, 27(4), pp. 44561.
4. Robinson, Peter, 2012. ³Towards a theory of digital editions.²
_Variants_ 10, pp.10531.
5. Haentjens Dekker, Ronald, Dirk van Hulle, Gregor Middell, Vincent
Neyt, Joris van Zundert, 2015. ³Computer-supported collation of
modern manuscripts: CollateX and the Beckett Digital Manuscript
Project², _Digital scholarship in the humanities_, 30(3), pp.
45270.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This announcement has been posted to Humanist (http://dhhumanist.org/),
Digital Classicist (http://www.digitalclassicist.org/), Digital
Medievalist (https://digitalmedievalist.wordpress.com/), TEI-L
(http://www.tei-c.org/Support/index.xml#tei-l), WWP-Encoding
(http://listserv.neu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A0=wwp-encoding), and DHUF Digital
Humanities Flanders (dh_flanders(a)googlegroups.com). Please circulate.
Dear all,
This might be of interest to some of our members. The CNRS is offering 2 post-doctoral contracts (2 years, plus 1 optional year) for DH projects. Since the successful candidates wil be affected to the IRHT, a famous research centre in Medieval Studies (also Early Modern), this is of particular interest for Digital Medievalists:
http://www.irht.cnrs.fr/fr/actualites/humanites-numeriques-appel-candidatur…
Best,
Marjorie
**apologies for cross-posting and feel free to distribute**
The Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies (SIMS) is now accepting applications for the 2017-2018 Visiting Research Fellowship program. Guided by the vision of its founders, Lawrence J. Schoenberg and Barbara Brizdle Schoenberg, SIMS aims to bring manuscript culture, modern technology, and people together to provide access to and understanding of our shared intellectual heritage. Part of the Penn Libraries, SIMS oversees an extensive collection of pre-modern manuscripts from around the world, with a special focus on the history of philosophy and science, and creates open-access digital content to support the study of its collections. SIMS also hosts the Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts<http://sdbm.library.upenn.edu/> and the annual Schoenberg Symposium on Manuscript Studies in the Digital Age<http://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/lectures/ljs_symposium.html>.
The SIMS Visiting Research Fellowships have been established to encourage research relating to the pre-modern manuscript collections at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries, including the Schoenberg Collection. Affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania, located near other manuscript-rich research collections (the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, the Free Library of Philadelphia, the Chemical Heritage Foundation, and the Rosenbach Museum and Library, among many others), and linked to the local and international scholarly communities, SIMS offers fellows a network of resources and opportunities for collaboration. Fellows will be encouraged to interact with SIMS staff, Penn faculty, and other medieval and early modern scholars in the Philadelphia area. Fellows will also be expected to present their research at Penn Libraries either during the term of the fellowship or on a selected date following the completion of the term.
Applications are due May 1, 2017. More information on eligibility and the application process is available here: https://schoenberginstitute.org/visiting-research-fellowships-2 .
For more information on SIMS, go to http://schoenberginstitute.org/. On Penn's pre-modern manuscript holdings in general, go to: http://dla.library.upenn.edu/dla/medren.
*** apologies for cross-posting***
Dear colleagues,
We are pleased to invite you to the workshop that wewill be holding as part of the ERC POSTDATA project: Poetry Standardization andLinked Open Data: "Building a common model for semanticinteroperability in the digital poetry ecosystems".
The Workshop will take place from 15 to 17March 2017 at the Faculty of Humanities of the UNED, and will beorganized by the Laboratory of Innovation in Digital Humanities LINHD. Theevent is part of the events celebration of the 10 years’ anniversary of theEuropean Research Council: ERC week and Beyond.
The guests at the workshop are the representatives of10 databases, of the 25 with which the POSTDATA team collaborates, arelationship that already comes from previous projects as DIREPO. The POSTDATAcollaborators are poetic projects of long standing and tradition that have beenworking in the philological field in different languages and with differentapproaches to gather information to create a common conceptual model. Theworkshop is designed over three days with open lectures to the public in themorning and private work sessions for the team and project partners in theafternoon.
You can find more information about this event at thefollowing link:
http://postdata.linhd.es/workshop/
Best regards,
Elena González-Blanco García
Directora del Laboratorio de Innovación en Humanidades Digitales
http://linhd.uned.es
@elenagbg
----
Queridosamigos,
Nos complaceinvitaros al workhsop que celebraremos en ámbito del proyecto ERCPOSTDATA: Poetry Standardization and Linked Open Data: “Building a common model for semantic interoperability in thedigital poetry ecosystems”.
El Workshop tendrá lugar entre los días 15 y 17 de marzo de 2017 en la Facultad deHumanidades de la UNED, y será organizado por el Laboratorio de Innovación enHumanidades Digitales LINHD dentro de los eventos de la celebración de los10 años de aniversario del European Research Council: ERC week and Beyond.
Los invitados al taller sonlos representantes de 10 bases de datos, de los 25 con los que elequipo de POSTDATA colabora, relación que viene ya desde proyectos anteriorescomo DIREPO. Se trata de proyectos poéticos de larga andadura y tradición quellevan trabajando en el ámbito en diferentes lenguas y con distintasaproximaciones para recopilar información que permita crear un modelo conceptualComún. El taller está diseñado a lo largo de tres días con ponencias abiertas al público por las mañana ysesiones privadas de trabajo para el equipo y los socios del proyecto por latarde.
Podéisencontrar más información sobre este evento en el siguiente enlace: http://postdata.linhd.es/workshop/
Un saludo muy cordial,
Elena González-Blanco García
Directora del Laboratorio de Innovación en Humanidades Digitales
http://linhd.uned.es
@elenagbg