Dear colleagues,
Last year, I annouced you the opening of a new MA in Digital and Computational Humanities at Paris Sciences & Lettres University. After its first year of existence, I am glad to announce that we are recruiting students again for next year. We would be very glad to receive applications from students with a background in medieval studies, a field strongly present in the institutions that participate to this degree (École des chartes, École pratique des hautes études, École des hautes études en sciences sociales and École normale supérieure).
This degree is research-oriented, and aims to be at the intersection of the humanities and data science. Students follow half their courses in the field of the humanities in which they specialise themselves (we have classes on a great variety of subjects, from palaeography, diplomatics, philology, codicology, epigraphy, to historical anthropology or economic history, and a variety of geographic and linguistic areas, from Latin to Hebrew or medieval Hindi). In the other half of their courses, we teach them data manipulation, programming (Python, R), deep learning, statistics and mathematical modelling.
The deadline for application is the 29 june 2018, with a possible second row of applications in september.
The English prospectus can be found at: http://www.chartes.psl.eu/sites/default/files/atoms/files/flyer-master-huma…
And more information here: http://www.chartes.psl.eu/en/cursus/ma-digital-humanities
Most courses are in French, and a familiarity of the applicants with the language is advised, though there are some opportunities for students to follow courses of French as a foreign language.
Do not hesitate to forward to anyone that might be interested.
Best wishes,
Jean-Baptiste Camps
*Embracing customization in post-conflict reconstruction*
Zena Kamash (Royal Holloway)
Friday June 1, 2018 at 16:30
Institute of Classical Studies
Room G21A, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU
In this paper, I consider how customisable approaches to reconstruction might be able to embrace the multivocality and flexibility needed to aid recovery following conflict. I start with the debate over accuracy concerning the Institute of Digital Archaeology’s replica Palmyra arch. I argue that, instead, we need to ask why we are creating reconstructions and for whom. I then look at examples from creative practice, including Michael Rakowitz and Morehshin Allahyari, as inspiration for more participatory and flexible reconstructions.
This seminar will be livecast: https://youtu.be/_fKL09wXofs
Full abstract: http://digitalclassicist.org/wip/wip2018.html
ALL WELCOME
==
Dr Gabriel BODARD
Reader in Digital Classics
Institute of Classical Studies
University of London
Senate House
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU
E: Gabriel.bodard(a)sas.ac.uk
T: +44 (0)20 78628752
http://digitalclassicist.org/
Vanderbilt University invites applications for a postdoctoral fellowship in TEI/MEI as part of the Digital Cultural Heritage Research Cluster<https://www.vanderbilt.edu/strategicplan/trans-institutional-programs/tips-…> situated within the Vanderbilt University Center for Digital Humanities<https://www.vanderbilt.edu/digitalhumanities/>.
Applicants are invited from any relevant discipline including the humanities, library science, museum studies, or data science. We are looking for a talented scholar who will train and foster the growing community of students and faculty at Vanderbilt interested in the application of XML encoding to cultural heritage preservation and research. The successful applicant will be an effective teacher experienced in introducing beginners to the guidelines of the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI)<http://tei-c.org/> and also able to collaborate with scholars in the advanced application of the TEI in research. The ideal applicant will also be familiar with the Music Encoding Initiative (MEI)<http://music-encoding.org/> or willing to learn and teach its guidelines as part of the fellowship.
This fellow will join a new research cluster in Digital Cultural Heritage at Vanderbilt. Inspired by UNESCO’s mission to protect cultural heritage in danger of destruction, this cluster unites expertise across multiple disciplines (French, History, Computer Science, Religious Studies, Classics, Musicology, History of Art, Anthropology) and maintains interests in a variety of cultural expressions (archeological sites, artifacts and monuments, texts, music). Within and beyond the cluster, Vanderbilt is home to a number of active projects employing TEI XML. Several projects use a jointly developed TEI customization for historical geography and architecture including Syriaca.org<http://syriaca.org/>, Architectura Sinica<https://architecturasinica.org/>, and LOGAR: Linked Open Gazetteer of the Andean Region<http://www.logarandes.org/>. Other projects include a focus on text corpora such as The Digital Syriac Corpus<https://syriaccorpus.org/>, Digital Corpus Baudelaire<https://github.com/HeardLibrary/corpus-baudelaire>, and Hannah Arendt: Complete Works<https://as.vanderbilt.edu/grees/arendt/arendt.php>. In 2014, Vanderbilt hosted the NEH funded XQuery Summer Institute [http://xqueryinstitute.org/] which focused on the use of the TEI extensively.
The term of appointment is one year, beginning in August 2018, with the possibility of renewal for a second year, pending approval of funding and satisfactory performance. The salary is $50,000 a year, plus benefits and the possibility of funding for conference related travel and expenses. The fellow will join a cohort of other postdoctoral fellows hosted at the Vanderbilt University Center for Digital Humanities and have access to the professional development support of the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs<https://gradschool.vanderbilt.edu/postdoctoral/about.php>. We offer regular training in XQuery<https://heardlibrary.github.io/xquery-working-group/>.
During the period of the fellowship, the fellow is expected to be in residence. The fellow’s responsibilities include collaborating with faculty on research projects with opportunities for joint publications. The fellow will work with the director of the research cluster to define both formal and informal teaching duties to train undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty in the use of TEI and MEI XML. The fellow will also have opportunity to conduct their own research and will be expected to participate in the seminars and academic community of the research cluster and the Center for Digital Humanities.
Qualifications
Required:
1. A PhD in a field relevant to the broad aims of the research cluster.
2. Experience with the guidelines of the Text Encoding Initiative.
Desired:
1. Familiarity with or willingness to learn the guidelines of the Music Encoding Initiative
2. Familiarity with XSLT, XQuery, TEI schemas, TEI tools such as Roma and OxGarage, or other skill sets related to working with data in XML.
3. Broad experience in the digital humanities.
How to Apply
A complete application will include the following materials in digital format:
1. A cover letter indicating applicant’s qualifications;
2. A current curriculum vitae;
3. A scholarly publication, dissertation chapter, or digital project representing the applicant's scholarly work related to XML encoding;
4. Letters of recommendation sent directly by two references who can speak to the themes of the postdoctoral fellowship.
Review of applications will begin immediately. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. Priority consideration will be given to applications received by June 31, 2018.
Applications, letters, and inquiries should be sent to Lynn Ramey, Professor of French, Vanderbilt University, lynn.ramey(a)vanderbilt.edu<mailto:lynn.ramey@vanderbilt.edu>.
Vanderbilt University is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer. Women, minorities, people with disabilities and protected veterans are encouraged to apply.
Lynn Ramey | Professor | French | Vanderbilt University
email<mailto:lynn.ramey@vanderbilt.edu> | 615.322.6900 | website<http://my.vanderbilt.edu/lynnramey/>
*** Apologies for cross posting****
The Second Annual FORCE11 Scholarly Communications Institute (FSCI2018)
University of California, San Diego
July 30-August 3, 2018
http://www.force11.org/fsci/2018.
FSCI2018 is a week long summer school on the latest trends in Scholarly
Communications. Classes are taught by leaders in the field to participants
of all levels, from absolute beginners to advanced at scholarly
communication.
If you are a scholar/researcher, librarian, institution administrator,
funding agency manager, publishing administrator/editor, data manager,
student, or anyone else who participates in scholarly communication, you
will benefit from attending FSCI.
FSCI2018 Course list:
- Inside Scholarly Communications Today
- Reproducible Research Reporting and Dynamic Documents with Open
Authoring Tools: Toward the Paper of the Future
- Collaboration, Communities and Collectivities: Understanding
Collaboration in the Scholarly Commons
- Community, Collaboration, and Impact: Open Scholarly Communication for
Humanities and Social Sciences
- Building an Open,Fair and Sustainable Information-Rich Research
Institution
- Data in the Scholarly Communications Life Cycle
- The Basics and Beyond: Developing a Critical, Community-Based Approach
to Open Education
- Research Reproducibility in Theory and Practice
- The Art of Transforming a Research Paper into a Lay Summary
- Open South: The Open Science Experience in Latin America and the
Caribbean
- Pre- and Post-Publication Peer Review: Perspectives and Platforms
- Detection of Questionable Publishing Practices: Procedures, Key
Elements and Practical Examples
- Open Data Visualization - Tools and Techniques to Better Report Data
- Public Humanities as Scholarly Communication
- Integrating Wikidata with Your Research and Curation Workflows
- How Much Does Open Access Cost? A Hands-on Approach to Tracking and
Analysing Article Processing Charges
- Publishing Reproducible Code and Data: A Hands-on, Bring-Your-Own-Code
Course
- Opening the Research Enterprise: Partnering to Support Openness in
Grant-Funded Faculty Research
- Implementing Software Citation
- Mentoring the Next Generation of Open Scholars: Approaches, Tools &
Tactics
- Structural Biology: A Prototypical Case for Publishing Big Data
Contact: Stephanie Hagstrom fsci-info(a)force11.org
FSCI is organized by FORCE11 (The Future of Research Communication and
e-Scholarship) in collaboration with the University of California San Diego
Library. Force11 is a community of scholars, librarians, archivists,
publishers, and research funders who study and facilitate new developments
in knowledge creation and communication. Membership is open to all who
share this interest!
Dra. Gimena del Rio Riande
Investigadora Adjunta. IIBICRIT, CONICET (Instituto de Investigaciones
Bibliográficas y Crítica Textual) - http://www.iibicrit-conicet.gov.ar/
<http://www.iibicrit-conicet.gov.ar/>
Twitter: @gimenadelr
Asociación Argentina de Humanidades Digitales: http://aahd.net.ar
Coordinadora Humanidades Digitales CAICYT Lab:
http://www.caicyt-conicet.gov.ar/micrositios/hd/
<http://www.caicyt-conicet.gov.ar/micrositios/hd/>
Marcelo T. de Alvear 1694 (1060). Buenos Aires - Argentina
(54)-11-4129-1158
[image: Mailtrack]
<https://mailtrack.io?utm_source=gmail&utm_medium=signature&utm_campaign=sig…>
Remitente
notificado con
Mailtrack
<https://mailtrack.io?utm_source=gmail&utm_medium=signature&utm_campaign=sig…>
28/05/18
16:00:27
*** Apologies for cross posting****
The Second Annual FORCE11 Scholarly Communications Institute (FSCI2018)
University of California, San Diego
July 30-August 3, 2018
http://www.force11.org/fsci/2018.
FSCI2018 is a week long summer school on the latest trends in Scholarly Communications. Classes are taught by leaders in the field to participants of all levels, from absolute beginners to advanced at scholarly communication.
If you are a scholar/researcher, librarian, institution administrator, funding agency manager, publishing administrator/editor, data manager, student, or anyone else who participates in scholarly communication, you will benefit from attending FSCI.
FSCI2018 Course list:
* Inside Scholarly Communications Today
* Reproducible Research Reporting and Dynamic Documents with Open Authoring Tools: Toward the Paper of the Future
* Collaboration, Communities and Collectivities: Understanding Collaboration in the Scholarly Commons
* Community, Collaboration, and Impact: Open Scholarly Communication for Humanities and Social Sciences
* Building an Open,Fair and Sustainable Information-Rich Research Institution
* Data in the Scholarly Communications Life Cycle
* The Basics and Beyond: Developing a Critical, Community-Based Approach to Open Education
* Research Reproducibility in Theory and Practice
* The Art of Transforming a Research Paper into a Lay Summary
* Open South: The Open Science Experience in Latin America and the Caribbean
* Pre- and Post-Publication Peer Review: Perspectives and Platforms
* Detection of Questionable Publishing Practices: Procedures, Key Elements and Practical Examples
* Open Data Visualization - Tools and Techniques to Better Report Data
* Public Humanities as Scholarly Communication
* Integrating Wikidata with Your Research and Curation Workflows
* How Much Does Open Access Cost? A Hands-on Approach to Tracking and Analysing Article Processing Charges
* Publishing Reproducible Code and Data: A Hands-on, Bring-Your-Own-Code Course
* Opening the Research Enterprise: Partnering to Support Openness in Grant-Funded Faculty Research
* Implementing Software Citation
* Mentoring the Next Generation of Open Scholars: Approaches, Tools & Tactics
* Structural Biology: A Prototypical Case for Publishing Big Data
Contact: Stephanie Hagstrom fsci-info(a)force11.org
FSCI is organized by FORCE11 (The Future of Research Communication and e-Scholarship) in collaboration with the University of California San Diego Library. Force11 is a community of scholars, librarians, archivists, publishers, and research funders who study and facilitate new developments in knowledge creation and communication. Membership is open to all who share this interest!
[U of Lethbridge Logo]
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Professor
Chief Spokesperson (Bargaining), University of Lethbridge Faculty Association
Editor, Digital Studies/Le champ num<http://digitalstudies.org/>érique
<http://digitalstudies.org/>
Vice President, Force 11<http://force11.org>
Department of English and University Library
University of Lethbridge
4401 University Drive West
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Canada
Tel. +1 (403) 329-2377
http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell
@danielPaulOD
Apologies for any cross posting
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
Workshop on Computational Methods in the Humanities 2018
(COMHUM 2018)
June 4–5, 2018 · University of Lausanne, Switzerland
https://wp.unil.ch/llist/en/programme/
Registration Deadline: June 1, 2018
INVITATION AND SCOPE OF THE WORKSHOP: https://wp.unil.ch/llist/en/
event/comhum2018/
You are cordially invited to attend the Workshop on Computational
Methods in the Humanities 2018 (COMHUM 2018), listen to the talks
(including invited talks by Bruno Cornelis, Maristella Agosti, and
Manfred Thaller), and participate in the discussions.
It is often said that the digital humanities are “situated at the
intersection of computer science and the humanities,” but what does
this mean? We believe that the point of using computers in the
humanities is not just to automatically analyze larger amounts of data
or to accelerate research. We therefore prefer to understand digital
humanities as (1) the study of means and methods of constructing
formal models in the humanities and (2) as the application of these
means and methods for the construction of concrete models in
particular humanities disciplines. The central research questions are
thus correspondingly (1) which computational methods are most
appropriate for dealing with the particular challenges posed by
humanities research, e.g., uncertainty, vagueness, incompleteness, but
also with different positions (points of view, values, criteria,
perspectives, approaches, readings, etc.)? And (2) how can such
computational methods be applied to concrete research questions in the
humanities?
PROGRAM: https://wp.unil.ch/llist/en/programme/
Monday, June 4, 2018
11:00–11:30 Welcome
11:30–12:30 Invited talk: Bruno Cornelis (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)
12:30–14:00 Lunch
14:00–15:00 Invited talk: Maristella Agosti (Università di Padova)
15:00–15:30 Coffee
15:30–17:00
• Mats Dahllöf: Clustering Writing Components from Medieval
Manuscripts
• Elli Bleeker, Ronald Haentjens Dekker, and Bram Buitendijk:
Understanding Texts as Graphs: An Inclusive Approach to Text
Modeling
• Jean-Baptiste Camps and Julien Randon-Furling: A Dynamic
Model of Manuscript Transmission; Elena Spadini:
Exercises in
Modelling: Textual Variants
Tuesday, June 5, 2018
09:15–10:00
• Christelle Cocco, Raphaël Ceré, and Pierre-Yves Brandt:
Quantification of Drawing Colours in Human Sciences
• Mattia Egloff and François Bavaud: Taking Into Account
Semantic Similarities in Correspondence Analysis
10:00–10:30 Coffee
10:30–11:30 Invited talk: Manfred Thaller (emeritus, Universität zu Köln):
Decoding What the Sender Did Not Want to Transmit. Information
Technology and Historical Data
11:30–13:00
• Barbara McGillivray, Giovanni Colavizza, and Tobias Blanke:
Towards a Quantitative Research Framework for Historical
Disciplines
• Franziska Diehr, Maximilian Brodhun, Sven Gronemeyer,
Christian Prager, Elisabeth Wagner, Katja Diederichs, and
Nikolai Grube: Modelling Vagueness – A Criteria-Based System
for the Qualitative Assessment of Reading Proposals for the
Deciphering of Classic Mayan Hieroglyphs
• Gary Munnelly and Seamus Lawless: Linking Historical Sources
to Established Knowledge Bases in Order to Inform Entity
Linkers in Cultural Heritage
• Cristina Vertan: Supporting Hermeneutic Interpretation of
Historical Documents by Computational Methods
13:00–14:30 Lunch
14:30–16:00
• Susan Leavy, Karen Wade, Gerardine Meaney, and Derek Greene:
Navigating Literary Text Using Word Embeddings and Semantic
Lexicons
• Jose Luis Losada: Map Visualization and Quantification of
Literary Places in a Spanish Corpus
• Thomas Schmidt and Manuel Burghardt: Toward a Tool for
Sentiment Analysis for German Historic Plays
• Kyoko Sugisaki: Modeling Thematic Structure in Holiday Postcards
REGISTRATION (deadline June 1, 2018):
Please register at https://wp.unil.ch/llist/en/registration/
Registration standard fees: 50 CHF or 40€, payable directly on site.
The fee covers lunch and coffee breaks on both workshop days.
CONTACT
Questions and inquiries should be sent to COMHUM2018 Conference
Secretariat: <secretariat-sli(a)unil.ch> or to Prof. Michael Piotrowski,
Program Committee Chair: <michael.piotrowski(a)unil.ch>
CONFERENCE WEB SITE: https://wp.unil.ch/llist/en/event/comhum2018/
--
elenaspadini.com
PostDoc - UNIL
Centre de recherches sur les lettres romandes <http://www.unil.ch/crlr>
This is just a reminder that the CFP closes on June 15. Please don't hesitate to contact me with any questions or for further information.
Best,
Lynn
From: Ransom, Lynn
Sent: Thursday, April 5, 2018 3:27 PM
To: dm-l(a)uleth.ca
Subject: MAA2019 CFP: Digitizing the Global Middle Ages
Dear friends,
The 94th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy will be held in Philadelphia on the University of Pennsylvania campus from March 7-9, 2019. The overall theme of the conference is "The Global Turn in Medieval Studies." As a co-chair of the organizing committee, I would especially like to invite members of the dm- list to propose papers or sessions relating to the thread "Digitizing the Global Middle Ages: Practices, Sustainability, and Ethics." While this thread can be broadly interpreted, our aim is to further conversations on the role and value of digitization in the preservation of our shared cultural heritage and on the practices and ethics of digitizing across cultural and geographic boundaries.
If you are interested in submitting a proposal, please consult the CFP, available here: www.medievalacademy.org/page/2019Meeting<http://www.medievalacademy.org/page/2019Meeting>.
Individuals or groups may propose a poster, paper, full session, roundtable or workshop. Membership in the Medieval Academy is required to present at the conference, but special consideration will be given to individuals whose fields would not traditionally involve membership in the Medieval Academy. Proposals are due June 15, 2018.
Please feel free to distribute this announcement to other lists that may have interested members.
And please don't hesitate to contact me or any member of the organizing committee (names appear on CFP) if you have questions.
Best,
Lynn
******************
Lynn Ransom, Ph.D.
Curator of Programs, Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies
schoenberginstitute.org
Project Director, The New Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts
https://sdbm.library.upenn.edu/
Co-Editor, Manuscript Studies: A Journal of the Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies
mss.pennpress.org
The University of Pennsylvania Libraries
3420 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6206
215.898.7851
Dear list members,
Digital Medievalist will be holding elections at the end of June 2018 for five positions to its Executive Board. Board positions are for two year terms and incumbents may be re-elected (for a maximum of three terms in a row). Members of the Board are responsible for the overall direction of the organisation and leading the Digital Medievalist’s many projects and programmes. This is a working board, and so it is expected that you are willing and able to commit a little bit of time to helping Digital Medievalist undertake some of its activities (such as helping to run its its journal, conference sessions, etc.).
For further information about the Executive and Digital Medievalist more generally please see the DM website, particularly:
https://digitalmedievalist.wordpress.com/about/https://digitalmedievalist.wordpress.com/about/board-roles/https://digitalmedievalist.wordpress.com/about/election-procedures/https://digitalmedievalist.wordpress.com/about/bylaws/
We are now seeking nominations (including self-nominations) for the annual elections. In order to be eligible for election, candidates must be members of Digital Medievalist (membership is conferred simply by subscription to the organisation’s mailing list, dm-l) and have made some demonstrable contribution either to the DM project (e.g. to the mailing list, or the wiki, etc.), or to the field of digital medieval studies.
If you are interested in running for these positions or are able to recommend a suitable candidate, please contact Lisa Fagin Davis (LFD(a)TheMedievalAcademy.org) or Roman Bleier (roman.bleier(a)uni-graz.at) who will treat your nomination or enquiries in confidence. The nomination period will close at 23:59 UTC on Friday June 8 and elections will be held by electronic ballot from Monday, 25 June 2018, closing at 23:59 UTC on Friday, 6 July 2018.
Digital Medievalist -- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
Journal: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/
Journal Editors: editors _AT_ digitalmedievalist.org
News: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/news/
Wiki: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/wiki/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/digitalmedieval
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gidI320313760
Discussion list: dm-l(a)uleth.ca
Change list options: http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
a quite astonishing piece of work, and congratulations to you, Lisa, and
everyone else who was involved in putting that site together.
navigating around it to take advantage of all the many features is quick and
easy to learn.
the "image manipulation" feature is particularly useful.
best,
christopher
p.s. so, when may we expect to see all other surviving European manuscripts
put on line in the same fashion? (after all, virtually every ms. is a kind of
"fragment" isn't it?)
------ Original Message ------
Received: Tue, 22 May 2018 10:13:13 AM EDT
From: Lisa Fagin Davis <lfd(a)themedievalacademy.org>
To: dm-l(a)uleth.caCc: Christoph Flüeler <christophe.flueler(a)unifr.ch>, Edwin
Schroeder <edwin.schroeder(a)yale.edu>, Elizabeth Hebbard <ehebbard(a)iu.edu>,
William Stoneman <stoneman(a)fas.harvard.edu>, Ray Clemens
<raymond.clemens(a)yale.edu>, william.duba(a)unifr.ch
Subject: [dm-l] Latest blogpost
> My latest blopost, about the digital reconstruction of the Gottschalk
> Antiphonal using Fragmentarium:
>
https://manuscriptroadtrip.wordpress.com/2018/05/21/manuscript-road-trip-re…
> - Lisa
>
> --
> Lisa Fagin Davis
> Executive Director
> Medieval Academy of America
> 17 Dunster St., Suite 202
> Cambridge, Mass. 02138
>
> Phone: 617 491-1622
> Fax: 617 492-3303
> Email: LFD(a)TheMedievalAcademy.org
>
> Digital Medievalist -- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
> Journal: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/
> Journal Editors: editors _AT_ digitalmedievalist.org
> News: https://digitalmedievalist.wordpress.com/news/
> Twitter: http://twitter.com/digitalmedieval
> Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=49320313760
> Discussion list: dm-l(a)uleth.ca
> Change list options: http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
We are all looking forward to the Fragmentarium meeting in October. Exciting things are happening. Congratulations, Lisa.
Bill
From: DUBA William [mailto:william.duba@unifr.ch]
Sent: Tuesday, May 22, 2018 10:18 AM
To: Lisa Fagin Davis <lfd(a)themedievalacademy.org>; dm-l(a)uleth.ca
Cc: Ray Clemens <raymond.clemens(a)yale.edu>; Stoneman, William P. <stoneman(a)fas.harvard.edu>; FLUELER Christoph <christophe.flueler(a)unifr.ch>; Edwin Schroeder <edwin.schroeder(a)yale.edu>; Elizabeth Hebbard <ehebbard(a)iu.edu>
Subject: Re: Latest blogpost
Very cool! Congratulations on Gottschalk, and it's good to hear about what transpired in Kalamazoo! Also, nice video.
We've got more exciting fragment news on the way.
/Bill
________________________________
From: Lisa Fagin Davis <lfd(a)themedievalacademy.org<mailto:lfd@themedievalacademy.org>>
Sent: Tuesday, May 22, 2018 4:11 PM
To: dm-l(a)uleth.ca<mailto:dm-l@uleth.ca>
Cc: Ray Clemens; William Stoneman; FLUELER Christoph; DUBA William; Edwin Schroeder; Elizabeth Hebbard
Subject: Latest blogpost
My latest blo<g>post, about the digital reconstruction of the Gottschalk Antiphonal using Fragmentarium:
https://manuscriptroadtrip.wordpress.com/2018/05/21/manuscript-road-trip-re…<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__manuscriptroadtrip.wor…>
- Lisa
--
Lisa Fagin Davis
Executive Director
Medieval Academy of America
17 Dunster St., Suite 202
Cambridge, Mass. 02138
Phone: 617 491-1622
Fax: 617 492-3303
Email: LFD(a)TheMedievalAcademy.org<mailto:LFD@TheMedievalAcademy.org>