Digital Medievalist Elections!
The Digital Medievalist elections for 2009 have commenced and voting will
remain open until midnight on Saturday 30 May 2009. Anyone who is one
of the approximately 470 members of the Digital Medievalist mailing
list (where this message has been posted) is entitled to vote whether
you consider yourself a digital medievalist or not!
Executive Board positions are for two year terms and incumbents may be
re-elected. Members of the board are responsible for the over all
direction of the organisation and leading the Digital Medievalist's
many projects and programmes. This is a working board and candidates
should be willing and able to commit time to helping Digital
Medievalist undertake some of its activities (such as hands on
copy-editing of its journal). The DM Board members whose terms expire
this year are: Arianna Ciula, Daniel O'Donnell, Peter Robinson, and
Torsten Schassan. Digital Medievalist would like to thank them for
their work over the last few years.
Those running this year are: George Ferzoco, Franz Fischer, Michael
Norton, Daniel O'Donnell, Malte Rehbein, Torsten Schassan, Peter
Stokes, and Rebecca Welzenbach. Please vote for up to 4 of these people.
If you vote for more than four people your ballot will be discounted.
They have submitted biographical candidate statements to help you
decide.
Please vote for your Digital Medievalist board at:
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=KsM74twOtUNMzFfAzxp_2bdw_3d_3d
or
http://snipurl.com/dm2009
We will post reminders occasionally through the week.
Many thanks,
James Cummings and Roberto Rosselli Del Turco
(also posted to the TEI News server:
http://www.tei-c.org/News/index.xml#mm2010Call Please feel free to cross
post)
Call for Bids: TEI Conference and Members Meeting, 2010
The annual TEI Conference and Members' Meeting takes place every year in
late October or early November. We are now seeking bids to host this
event in 2010.
The meeting this year (2009) will take place on November 11-15 at the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI, USA. The previous meetings have
been:
* London, England, November 6-8, 2008. hosted by King's College London.
* College Park (MD), USA, October 31-November 3, 2007. Hosted by the
University of Maryland.
* Victoria, Canada, October 27-28, 2006. Hosted by the University of
Victoria.
* Sophia, Bulgaria, October 28-29, 2005. Hosted by the Bulgarian
Academy of Sciences.
* Baltimore, USA, October 22-23, 2004. Hosted by Johns Hopkins
University.
* Nancy, France, November 7-8 2003. Hosted by ATILF.
* Chicago, USA, October 11-12 2002. Hosted by the Newberry Library
and Northwestern University.
* Pisa, Italy, November 16-17 2001. Hosted by the University of Pisa.
The site of the conference and meeting has typically alternated between
Europe and North America, but that is not a fixed rule. We welcome
proposals from other parts of the world, and in particular from areas
where new TEI communities are arising.
This year's conference and meeting will be a four-day event (plus
pre-conference workshops), with approximately 120 attendees. The three
days of the main conference will include a mix of plenary lectures by
invited speakers, round-table discussions, and conference-style
sessions; there will also be a business meeting of the membership. The
fourth day (Sunday) will be a closed session for members of the Board.
Meetings of TEI Special Interest Groups (SIGs) may also scheduled for
this day. Future meetings should assume roughly this shape, although
there is considerable room for local initiative in consultation with the
Board.
The TEI Consortium guarantees direct costs of the conference and meeting
up to a maximum of US$5200 with special provisions for funding
attendance in excess of approximately 120 attendees. The conference
organising committee is also expected to seek additional funds from
local institutions, commercial sponsors, and other organisations. A
conference registration fee is charged to assist the TEI in recovering
its expenditure and ensure that it is able to underwrite the cost of
future conferences.
Bids should be sent to info(a)tei-c.org by no later than September 1,
2009, though institutions considering making a proposal are encouraged
to contact chair of the TEI (daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca
<mailto:daniel.odonnell@uleth.ca>) much earlier in the process in order
to discuss their ideas. Bids should include the following information:
* The name of the institution(s) making the bid
* The name, address, email, and telephone number of the contact person
* A brief description of the facilities available for the event
(rooms, equipment, technical support, food)
* An indication of what financial support, if any, the hosting
institution is prepared to give (for instance, sponsoring one or
more receptions or pre-meeting workshops; payment of travel
expenses for one or more plenary speakers; etc.)
* Any other details that may be useful in assessing the bid (e.g.
the presence of a conference on a related topic at the institution
around the time of the meeting; the launch of a new TEI-related
initiative at the institution, etc., ideas for a particular theme
or focus).
In submitting bids, local organisers are encouraged to be creative: the
TEI is willing to work with hosts to reflect local interests and strengths.
Further information about the requirements for the conference and
members meeting may be found in our document on Hosting a Members
Meeting <http://www.tei-c.org/Membership/Meetings/meeting_hosting.xml>
and the Board's own Practices and Procedures
<http://www.tei-c.org/Board/procedures.xml#body.1_div.4> document.
All bids will be reviewed by the TEI board, which makes the final decision.
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Associate Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Chair and CEO, Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org/)
Founding Director, Digital Medievalist Project (http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/)
Chair, Electronic Editions Advisory Board, Medieval Academy of America
Vox: +1 403 329-2377
Fax: +1 403 382-7191 (non-confidental)
Home Page: http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/
We are very pleased to announce the programme for this summer's Digital
Classicist seminar series.
All are welcome.
Simon
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Digital Classicist/ICS Work in Progress Seminar, Summer 2009*
Fridays at 16:30 in STB3/6 (Stewart House), Senate House, Malet Street,
London, WC1E 7HU
(NB: July 17th seminar in British Library, 96 Euston Rd, NW1 2DW)
June 5 Bart Van Beek (Leuven)
'Onomastics and Name-extraction in Graeco-Egyptian Papyri'
June 12 Philip Murgatroyd (Birmingham)
'Starting out on the Journey to Manzikert: Agent-based modelling and
Mediaeval warfare logistics'
June 19 Gregory Crane (Perseus Project, Tufts)
'No Unmediated Analysis: Digital services constrain and enable both
traditional and novel tasks'
June 26 Marco Büchler & Annette Loos (Leipzig)
'Textual Re-use of Ancient Greek Texts: A case study on Plato's works'
July 3 Roger Boyle & Kia Ng (Leeds)
'Extracting the Hidden: Paper Watermark Location and Identification'
July 10 Cristina Vertan (Hamburg)
'Teuchos: An Online Knowledge-based Platform for Classical Philology'
July 17 Christine Pappelau (Berlin) *NB: in British Library*
'Roman Spolia in 3D: High Resolution Leica 3D Laser-scanner meets
ancient building structures'
July 24 Elton Barker (Oxford)
'Herodotos Encoded Space-Text-Imaging Archive'
July 31 Leif Isaksen (Southampton)
'Linking Archaeological Data'
August 7 Alexandra Trachsel (Hamburg)
'An Online Edition of the Fragments of Demetrios of Skepsis'
ALL WELCOME
We are inviting both students and established researchers involved in
the application of the digital humanities to the study of the ancient
world to come and introduce their work. The focus of this seminar series
is the interdisciplinary and collaborative work that results at the
interface of expertise in Classics or Archaeology and Computer Science.
The seminar will be followed by wine and refreshments.
For more information please contact
Gabriel.Bodard(a)kcl.ac.uk, Stuart.Dunn(a)kcl.ac.uk, Juan.Garces(a)bl.uk, or
Simon.Mahony(a)kcl.ac.uk, or see the seminar website at
http://www.digitalclassicist.org/wip/wip2009.html
--
-----------------------------------------------------------
Simon Mahony
Research Associate
Digital Classicist
Centre for Computing in the Humanities
King's College London
26 - 29 Drury Lane,
London
WC2B 5RL
http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=WC2B_5RL
Tel: +44 (0)20 7848 2813
Fax: +44 (0)20 7848 2980
simon.mahony(a)kcl.ac.uk
http://www.digitalclassicist.org/http://wiki.digitalclassicist.org/
Dear colleagues,
The Institute of Documentology and Scholarly Editing (IDE) organises an international symposium on "Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age" in Munich, 3/4 July 2009. Please find a brief description below and more information including the preliminary programme here: http://www.hgw.geschichte.uni-muenchen.de/aktuelles/termine/tagung_kod_pal/….
You are all very welcome to participate.
Kind regards,
Malte Rehbein, NUI Galway
International Conference
"Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age", Munich, 3-4 July 2009
The conference will focus on the challenges and consequences of using IT and the internet for codicological and palaeographic research. The authors of some selected articles of an anthology to be published this summer by the Institute for Documentology and Scholarly Editing (IDE) will present and discuss their excellent research results with scholars and experts working on ancient books and manuscripts. The presentations will be given on current issues in the following fields: manuscript catalogues and descriptions, digitization of manuscripts, collaborative systems of research on manuscripts, codicological databases, manuscript catalogues, research based on digital resources, e-learning in palaeography, palaeographic databases (characters, scripts, scribes), (semi-) automatic recognition of scripts and scribes, digital tools for transcriptions, visions and prototypes of other digital tools.
A panel discussion will be held with renowned exponents in the field of codicology and palaeography and contributors of cutting edge research to get an overview of the state of the art as well as to open up new perspectives of codicological and palaeographic research in the "digital age".
The conference is open to the public.
----
Malte Rehbein M.A.
Marie Curie Research Fellow
Moore Institute
National University of Ireland, Galway
Mob.: +353 85 8144 685
Email: malte.rehbein(a)nuigalway.ie
Web: http://www.denkstaette.de
Hi all,
Just a reminder that you have only a couple more days to nominate
yourself or someone else to serve on the Digital Medievalist board.
If you have any questions feel free to email
election(a)digitalmedievalist.org and we'll give you an answer! See
below for more information.
Best,
-James
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: James Cummings <James.Cummings(a)digitalmedievalist.org>
Date: Wed, May 6, 2009 at 11:51 AM
Subject: Call for nominees for Digital Medievalist board.
To: Digital Medievalist list <dm-l(a)uleth.ca>
Please crosspost to other lists as appropriate
Call For Nominees
Digital Medievalist will be holding elections at the end of this month
for four positions to its board. Board positions are for two year
terms and incumbents may be re-elected. Members of the board are
responsible for the over all direction of the organisation and leading
the Digital Medievalist's many projects and programmes. This is a
working board and if you are willing and able to commit time to
helping Digital Medievalist undertake some of its activities
(such as hands on copy-editing of its journal) then please take
this into consideration when nominating yourself or accepting a
nomination.
Information about Digital Medievalist is available at its website.
See particularly:
- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/about.html
- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/bylaws.html
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 by
subscription to the organisation's mailing list, dm-l(a)uleth.ca) and
and have made some demonstrable contribution 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 the returning officers:
James Cummings and Roberto Rosselli Del Turco at:
election(a)digitalmedievalist.org
who will treat your nomination in confidence. The nomination period
will close at 0000 UTC Thursday May 21 and elections will be held
by electronic ballot through the end of the week of May 29th, 2009.
Many thanks,
James Cummings and Roberto Rosselli Del Turco
election(a)digitalmedievalist.org
Hello list,
My brother has asked if I can recommend a good book about John of
Gaunt, he's out of my area and I'm not on any medieval history lists
but perhaps there is someone here on DM who can help. He said he's
been reading something by Norman Cantor (who writes a lot of popular
medieval history) but he's finding it less than adequate. He reads
massive amounts about history so I'd be quite comfortable recommending
him something directed at a scholarly (as opposed to a popular)
audience. He just wants to learn about John of Gaunt.
Thanks for any suggestions.
Dot
--
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
TEI@Oxford Summer School 2009 -- now open for bookings!
The TEI@Oxford team is pleased to announce that we are now taking
bookings for our annual summer school.
Dates: Monday 20 July - Friday 24 July
Venue: Oxford University Computing Services
Full information and online booking:
http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/rts/events/2009-07/
This five-day course combines in-depth coverage of the latest version
of the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) Guidelines for the encoding of
digital text with hands-on practical exercises in their application.
If you are a project manager, research assistant, or encoder working
on any kind of project concerned with the creation or management of
digital text, this course is for you.
You should be generally computer literate (web, email,
word-processors) for this course. You may already be broadly familiar
with the idea of textual editing, perhaps (but not necessarily) with
some experience of producing HTML web pages, or of traditional
scholarly editing. You should be enthusiastic about the possibilities
offered by digital technologies and keen to learn more. You should be
prepared to get your hands dirty at the keyboard and you should not be
afraid of a little technical jargon.
At the end of the course we hope to have given you:
1. a good grounding in the theoretical issues underlying the use of
text markup, XML in particular;
2. an understanding of the purpose and principles of the Text
Encoding Initiative;
3. a survey of the full range of modules constituting the TEI's
current Recommendations;
4. experience of how the TEI scheme can be customized for particular
applications, and internationalized for different languages.
5. an introduction to some of the tools and methods in which TEI
documents are published and processed
Using OUCS' excellent teaching facilities, we will also provide you
with practical experience in:
* using online tools to build, verify, and document a TEI-conformant
schema
* using XML editing software to
o create new encoded texts
o standardize existing digital texts
* using a variety of web-based and desktop tools to display and
analyse TEI documents
The course will be taught by the TEI@Oxford team: Lou Burnard, James
Cummings, and Sebastian Rahtz, with the assistance of other invited
TEI experts.
--
Dr James Cummings, Research Technologies Service, University of Oxford
James dot Cummings at oucs dot ox dot ac dot uk
Please crosspost to other lists as appropriate
Call For Nominees
Digital Medievalist will be holding elections at the end of this month
for four positions to its board. Board positions are for two year
terms and incumbents may be re-elected. Members of the board are
responsible for the over all direction of the organisation and leading
the Digital Medievalist's many projects and programmes. This is a
working board and if you are willing and able to commit time to
helping Digital Medievalist undertake some of its activities
(such as hands on copy-editing of its journal) then please take
this into consideration when nominating yourself or accepting a
nomination.
Information about Digital Medievalist is available at its website.
See particularly:
- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/about.html
- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/bylaws.html
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 by
subscription to the organisation's mailing list, dm-l(a)uleth.ca) and
and have made some demonstrable contribution 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 the returning officers:
James Cummings and Roberto Rosselli Del Turco at:
election(a)digitalmedievalist.org
who will treat your nomination in confidence. The nomination period
will close at 0000 UTC Thursday May 21 and elections will be held
by electronic ballot through the end of the week of May 29th, 2009.
Many thanks,
James Cummings and Roberto Rosselli Del Turco
election(a)digitalmedievalist.org
[apologies for cross-posting]
International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo
Thursday, May 7, 2009, 6:30 pm
Fetzer 1035
On Thursday, May 7th, 2009 at 6:30pm, Digital Medievalist (DM) and the
Medieval Academy of America’s Committee on Electronic Resources (CER)
and Electronic Editions Advisory Board (EEAB) will be co-sponsoring a
reception. This reception is an ideal opportunity for speakers and
audience members participating in the more than 40 digital sessions at
this year's congress to meet and learn about each other's research.
To assist in this networking and community-building, a number of
medievalists engaged in digital-based or focussed research will be
displaying posters and short powerpoint presentations during the
reception. This will be a forum for speakers to give potential
audience members an advance taste of what they will be lecturing
about, and for speakers who have already presented to remind
colleagues about your research and projects and invite further
comment.
We hope to see you at the reception and poster session, which will be
held in Fetzer 1035 at 6:30 PM on Thursday.
--
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
Hi all,
I was just asked what kind of affiliation one needs to participate in
the TEI conference. The answer is none at all. This is a digitization
conference at which TEI members also meet rather than a meeting with
lectures. We also very much encourage non-TEI-centric views: we
regularly invite keynote speakers and accept papers that are critical
of, sceptical of, or otherwise questioning about TEI activities or
guidelines--or document modelling more generally. The range runs from
highly technical to quite theoretical, so there should be scope for most
active Digital Humanists.
So like many academic conferences, there is no need to be a member in
order to participate. Of course you will have a chance to join the TEI
at the conference if you wish! We might even let you drink the Koolaid ;)
-dan
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Associate Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Chair and CEO, Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org/)
Founding Director, Digital Medievalist Project (http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/)
Chair, Electronic Editions Advisory Board, Medieval Academy of America
Vox: +1 403 329-2377
Fax: +1 403 382-7191 (non-confidental)
Home Page: http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/