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Estimados compañeros,
Os hacemos llegar un curso de verano organizado por el Laboratorio de Humanidades Digitales de la UNED<https://linhd.uned.es/>. El curso lleva por título Creación de un proyecto en Humanidades Digitales basado en el análisis de textos: modelado y procesamiento<https://extension.uned.es/actividad/idactividad/24581> y se celebrará del 28 al 30 de junio. Puede realizarse presencialmente o en línea (en directo o en diferido), tiene una duración de 20 horas y será eminentemente práctico.
La investigación en Humanidades Digitales no ha dejado de crecer en los últimos años y son cada vez más los proyectos de historiadores, filólogos, o antropólogos que utilizan la tecnología para el análisis de corpus literarios en busca de patrones, la construcción de mapas digitales interactivos para una mejor visualización de los resultados de sus investigaciones, o la geolocalización de enclaves a los que se añaden capas de información multimedia, entre otras muchas posibilidades.
Los humanistas digitales tienen un futuro prometedor en un área en crecimiento en el que se requieren perfiles profesionales mixtos y flexibles, capaces de organizar y etiquetar objetos digitales; así como gestionar su visualización y preservación en un entorno digital. Sin embargo, para desarrollar la investigación en esta área se ha de disponer de ciertos conocimientos técnicos tales como los que se abordan en el curso que os presentamos.
El objetivo del mismo es diseñar un proyecto de humanidades digitales, desde el modelado del dominio hasta la creación de resultados y su diseminación, haciendo uso de lenguajes de programación, técnicas de modelado y visualización provenientes del mundo de la inteligencia artificial. Comenzaremos con una aproximación al mundo de las Humanidades Digitales y las problemáticas que surgen para el análisis de textos. Después, nos acercaremos a las metodologías y técnicas para resolver esos problemas mediante el modelado semántico y la perspectiva de los datos enlazados y lenguajes de marcas. Asimismo, se presentarán nuevos paradigmas computacionales relacionados con la Inteligencia Artificial como el procesamiento de textos, la estilometría, el deep learning, etc., y su aplicación. Para finalizar, se representarán los resultados obtenidos.
Podéis obtener más información sobre el mismo y matricularos en este enlace.<https://www.fundacion.uned.es/actividad/idactividad/24581>
Un cordial saludo
Beatriz Tejada Carrasco
Subdirectora de Planificación, Calidad y Comunicación
Biblioteca UNED
C/ Paseo de la senda del rey, 5
28040 Madrid
Teléfono: 91 398 61 67
email: btejada(a)pas.uned.es
AVISO LEGAL. Este mensaje puede contener información reservada y confidencial. Si usted no es el destinatario no está autorizado a copiar, reproducir o distribuir este mensaje ni su contenido. Si ha recibido este mensaje por error, le rogamos que lo notifique al remitente.
Le informamos de que sus datos personales, que puedan constar en este mensaje, serán tratados en calidad de responsable de tratamiento por la UNIVERSIDAD NACIONAL DE EDUCACIÓN A DISTANCIA (UNED) c/ Bravo Murillo, 38, 28015-MADRID-, con la finalidad de mantener el contacto con usted. La base jurídica que legitima este tratamiento, será su consentimiento, el interés legítimo o la necesidad para gestionar una relación contractual o similar. En cualquier momento podrá ejercer sus derechos de acceso, rectificación, supresión, oposición, limitación al tratamiento o portabilidad de los datos, ante la UNED, Departamento de Política Jurídica de Seguridad de la Información<https://www.uned.es/dpj>, o a través de la Sede electrónica<https://sede.uned.es/> de la Universidad.
Para más información visite nuestra Política de Privacidad<https://descargas.uned.es/publico/pdf/Politica_privacidad_UNED.pdf>.
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Dear digital medievalists,
Digital Medievalist is proud to announce the publication of its special volume dedicated to the Canterbury Tales Project.
A digital editing pioneer, the Canterbury Tales Project has experimented with innovative approaches to the analysis and publication of texts.
This collection offers detailed accounts of the project’s methodologies and the theoretical approaches behind them.
For your convenience, please find below the table of contents.
Barbara Bordalejo, special issue guest editor
Franz Fischer, editor-in-chief
Digital Medievalist, Volume 14 (2021), Special Issue: "The Canterbury Tales Project: Methods and Models"
https://journal.digitalmedievalist.org/issue/825/info/
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Canterbury Tales Project Special Issue: Introduction
Barbara Bordalejo
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8072
Making an Edition in an App
Barbara Bordalejo, Lina Gibbings, Richard North and Peter Robinson
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8067
“Pacience is an Heigh Vertu”: Managing the Canterbury Tales Project Via Textual Communities
Kyle Dase and Nicole Atkings
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8069
A Macron Signifying Nothing: Revisiting The Canterbury Tales Project Transcription Guidelines
Kendall Bitner and Kyle Dase
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8068
You’re Collating Just Fine and Other Lies You’ve Been Telling Yourself
Barbara Bordalejo and Adam Alberto Vázquez
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8066
Well-Behaved Variants Seldom Make the Apparatus: Stemmata and Apparatus in Digital Research
Barbara Bordalejo
https://doi.org/10.16995/dm.8065
--
Franz Fischer
Direttore, Venice Centre for Digital & Public Humanities (VeDPH)
Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici
Università Ca' Foscari
Palazzo Malcanton Marcorà
Dorsoduro 3484/D - 30123 Venezia
Tel.: +39 041 234 6266 (ufficio), +39 041 234 9863 (segreteria del centro)
https://www.unive.it/vedphhttps://www.i-d-e.de/https://journal.digitalmedievalist.org/
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Dear Digital Medievalists,
may I pint you the another open position in the ERC project "From
Digital to Distant Diplomatics"?
We are looking for developers interested in filling the DevOps role in a
well established infrastructure (so you're part of a team) extending it
to support machine learning activities, data exchange with existing
RESTful web services, building own services etc.
Deatils can be found at https://tinyurl.com/ERCDiDipJobOfferDeveloper2022
Applications via https://uni-graz.jobbase.io/job/qofmpfg4
For any further questions, please contact me.
Best regards
Georg Vogeler
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Dear Colleagues,
I am pleased to announce the publication of ChrysoCollate, a free computer program for collation and critical edition in any language (Unicode) developed by Sébastien Moureau (FNRS, UCLouvain).
This tool offers:
* two modes: collation mode and edition mode;
* a collation table with automatic distinctive colours and previsional completion of readings;
* annotation tools for the collation table, including a system of references to the images of the witnesses that allows you to navigate easily in your textual tradition;
* automatic apparatus, according to the readings that are chosen by the editor;
* a stemma codicum checker;
* a translation box to manage and synchronise your translation;
* exportation in various formats (odt, cte, etc.).
ChrysoCollate is freely available at https://uclouvain.be/chrysocollate/.
Kind regards,
Sébastien Moureau,
Chercheur qualifié at the FNRS<https://www.frs-fnrs.be/>,
Professor at the UCLouvain<https://uclouvain.be/fr/index.html>.
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A reminder that the next SIMS Online Lecture is happening this Friday!
The Rescue of Armenian Historiography and the Chronicle of Matthew of Edessa
Tara L. Andrews, University of Vienna
Friday, December 17, 2021, 12:00 - 1:30 pm EST (via Zoom)
Of the thirty-five manuscripts that remain of the 12th-century Chronicle of Matthew of Edessa, not a single one dates from before 1590, but over half of them were produced by 1700. This pattern of survival reflects a wider reality for Armenian literature, where the ravages of war and persecution, especially in the 15th and 16th centuries, gave way to a period of relative peace in the 17th century that provided an opportunity for a conscious "rescue" of the Armenian literary heritage, especially (but not exclusively) centered around the Amrdolu monastery of Bitlis, near Lake Van. In this talk I will present some of the features and puzzles of the manuscript tradition of the Chronicle that speak to this restoration, and at the same time give us glimpses into the history of the developing Armenian diaspora.
Registration is free and open to the public but required to receive the Zoom link. For more information and the link to register can be found here: The Rescue of Armenian Historiography and the Chronicle of Matthew of Edessa | Penn Libraries (upenn.edu)<https://www.library.upenn.edu/about/exhibits-events/rescue-armenian-histori…>.
More information about the SIMS Online Lecture Series can be found here<https://www.library.upenn.edu/about/exhibits-events/sims-online-lecture-ser…>.
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Dear Digital Medivalists,
may I point to an open position in the context of the recently granted
ERC ADG project "From Digital to Distant Diplomatics"
(https://www.didip.eu)? We are looking for a postdoctoral fellow
interested in studying the language in late medieval documents (mostly
Latin, but German, French, Chech and others as well, drawn from the
Monasterium.net collection https://www.monasterium.net/home). If you are
interested in historical linguistics (with application of digital
methods) or in computational linguistics (with focus on historical
texts), don't hesitate to get in contact with me
(georg.vogeler(a)uni-graz.at) or apply directly via
https://uni-graz.jobbase.io/job/4bzg23ii21l4f8zvkup9n1p8yy4ak5k
Best regards
Georg Vogeler
--
Prof. Dr. Georg Vogeler
Professur für Digital Humanities -
Zentrum für Informationsmodellierung
Universität Graz
A-8010 Graz | Elisabethstraße 59/III
Tel. +43 316 380 8033
<http://informationsmodellierung.uni-graz.at> - <http://gams.uni-graz.at>
<https://online.uni-graz.at/kfu_online/wbForschungsportal.cbShowPortal?pPers…>
Director of the Austrian Center for Digital Humanities at OeAW
<https://acdh.oeaw.ac.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>
Digital Medievalist <http://digitalmedievalist.org>
Text Encoding Initiative <http://tei-c.org>
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Dear all,
the VeDPH is please to announce three upcoming events on Digital and
Public Humanities:
= 1 =
13 December 2021, 18-21:00 (Venice time), Aula Magna Silvio Trentin, Ca'
Dolfin:
Annual presentation of Master degree in Digital and Public Humanities
a.k.a. VeDPH Solstice Party
Students will present and discuss their works with teachers and
discussants: Carolina Fernandez-Castrillo, Marie Redmond and Paolo
Monella. An aperitivo will take place in the Ca' Dolfin's garden:
Everyone welcome!
To access in presence is mandatory register at the following link:
https://forms.gle/SDJcwob3A7DNRpXZ6
Details: https://www.unive.it/data/agenda/2/56210
= 2 =
14 December 2021, 11-13:00 (Venice time), Sala Berengo, Ca’ Foscari and
online:
Humanities Horizons - History, Hacktivism and Genetic Criticism
Presentations by
Carolina Fernández-Castrillo (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid): The
Hacktivist Challenge: Beyond Data Visualisation
Elena Pierazzo (Université de Tours): Digital genetic criticism: there’s
nothing more practical than a good theory
Andrea Nanetti (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore):
Engineering Historical Memory
To participate in presence it is mandatory to register at the following
link: https://forms.gle/uknBHyWyUL2ykmxw9
For online participation please register at: https://bit.ly/31ofPdL
Details: https://www.unive.it/data/agenda/2/56028
= 3 =
15 December 2021, 17-19:00 (Venice time), online:
5th seminar of the autumn/winter cycle of VeDPH Seminars in Digital and
Public Humanities
Arturo Gallia (Università di Roma Tre): Historical Cartography and
Public History
Details and registration at: https://www.unive.it/data/agenda/2/51835
Best regards,
Paolo Monella
Associate member of the VeDPH research center
--
Ricercatore (RTDA), Latino e Informatica umanistica
Dipartimento di Scienze dell'Antichità
Sapienza Università di Roma
Membro del gruppo di ricerca e responsabile DH dell'ERC-2019-AdG Project
PAGES (Nr. 882588)
Membro del Consiglio Direttivo dell'AIUCD
Membro associato dei centri i ricerca DH VeDPH (Ca' Foscari) e DISH
(Università di Torino)
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The editors of Manuscript Studies: A Journal of the Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries are pleased to make the following announcements:
* The Fall 2021 issue is out! Abstracts are available here: https://mss.pennpress.org/about/current-issue-abstracts/
* We are seeking submissions for the Spring 2023 issue and beyond. Peer-reviewed articles for possible publication in the Spring 2023 issue should be submitted no later than June 30, 2022. Non-peer reviewed Annotations featuring recent discoveries, project reports, etc. (ca. 3000 words) can be submitted up to February 28, 2022 for the Fall 2022 issue. Articles and Annotations can be submitted here: https://manuscriptstudies.scholasticahq.com/for-authors
* Thanks to a generous agreement with the University of Pennsylvania Press, all Articles and Annotations in Manuscript Studies are made available on an open access basis after one year from the date of publication. Articles and Annotations from Vol. 5:2 (Fall 2020) are now available for downloading and sharing on Penn's Scholarly Commons repository. To access the pdfs, go to: http://repository.upenn.edu/mss_sims/
Manuscript Studies brings together scholarship from around the world and across disciplines related to the study of pre-modern manuscript books and documents. This peer-reviewed journal is open to contributions that rely on both traditional methodologies of manuscript study and those that explore the potential of new ones. We publish articles that engage in a larger conversation on manuscript culture and its continued relevance in today's world and highlight the value of manuscript evidence in understanding our shared cultural and intellectual heritage. Studies that incorporate digital methodologies to further understanding of the physical and conceptual structures of the manuscript book are encouraged. A separate section, entitled Annotations, features research in progress and digital project reports.
For more information and to subscribe, go to http://mss.pennpress.org. For direct inquiries, please don't hesitate to contact the editors at sims-mss(a)pobox.upenn.edu<mailto:sims-mss@pobox.upenn.edu>.
Lynn Ransom, Ph.D.
Director, Digital Medievalist<https://digitalmedievalist.wordpress.com/> (2020-2022)
Curator of Programs, Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies<schoenberginstitute.org>
Project Director, Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts<https://sdbm.library.upenn.edu/pages/SDBM%20Name%20Authority>
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
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The Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies is pleased to announce the next lecture in its Online Lecture Series:
The Rescue of Armenian Historiography and the Chronicle of Matthew of Edessa
Tara L. Andrews, University of Vienna
Friday, December 17, 2021, 12:00 - 1:30 pm EST (via Zoom)
Of the thirty-five manuscripts that remain of the 12th-century Chronicle of Matthew of Edessa, not a single one dates from before 1590, but over half of them were produced by 1700. This pattern of survival reflects a wider reality for Armenian literature, where the ravages of war and persecution, especially in the 15th and 16th centuries, gave way to a period of relative peace in the 17th century that provided an opportunity for a conscious "rescue" of the Armenian literary heritage, especially (but not exclusively) centered around the Amrdolu monastery of Bitlis, near Lake Van. In this talk I will present some of the features and puzzles of the manuscript tradition of the Chronicle that speak to this restoration, and at the same time give us glimpses into the history of the developing Armenian diaspora.
Registration is required but free and open to the public via this link<https://libcal.library.upenn.edu/calendar/kislak/Andrews>.
More information about the SIMS Online Lecture Series can be found here<https://www.library.upenn.edu/about/exhibits-events/sims-online-lecture-ser…>.