Sismel-Societa Internazionale per lo Studio Del medioevo Latino
And would you count the British Library, with the release of Michelle Brown's _The Lindisfarne Gospels_, with accompanying CD, and the partner project with someone in Germany whose name I can't recall for a digital edition of same?
Not quite what you asked for, but in that direction...
>
>
> When I think of publishers and series of digital medieval studies, the
> first two that spring to mind are SEENET (Society of Early English and
> Norse Electronic Texts) and SDE (Scholarly Digital Editions). Are there
> others? I'm particularly interested in finding series or publishers with
> several digital studies published, and, even better, any that have
> developed a house style adopted by more than one project (i.e. not just
> several volumes issued by the same project, but also several projects in
> the same press/series).
>
> Appreciate any help!
>
> -dan
>
>
> --
> Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
> Associate Professor and Acting Chair,
> Department of English
> University of Lethbridge
> Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
> Canada
>
> Tel. +1 (403) 329-2378
> Fax +1 (403) 382-7191
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Digital Medievalist Project
> Homepage: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org
> Journal (Spring 2005-): http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal.cfm
> RSS (announcements) server: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/rss/rss2.cfm
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> dm-l(a)uleth.ca
> http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
>
--
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FYI
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Oxford Workshop on Advanced Text Encoding with TEI P5: first call for
registration
Date: Wed, 24 May 2006 16:55:08 +0100
From: Lou Burnard <lou.burnard(a)COMPUTING-SERVICES.OXFORD.AC.UK>
Reply-To: Lou Burnard <lou.burnard(a)COMPUTING-SERVICES.OXFORD.AC.UK>
To: TEI-L(a)listserv.brown.edu
Registration is now open for a three-day workshop on Advanced Text
Encoding and Teaching using TEI P5. The Workshop will be held at Oxford
University Computing Services, from Sept 18th to 20th. See
http://tei.oucs.ox.ac.uk/Oxford/2006-09-methNet/ for further details.
The Workshop is intended for trainers and advanced users of text
encoding methods in the Arts and Humanities. We will try to combine an
investigation of current training methods with an exposition of the full
range of capabilities now available in TEI P5, with a view to developing
generic training materials which can subsequently be made available via
the AHRC ICT Methods Network, which is sponsoring the event.
In addition to the Oxford team (Rahtz, Cummings, and Burnard), the
Workshop will be taught by three internationally known experts in the
domain: Julia Flanders (Brown University); Edward Vanhoutte (Royal
Flemish Academy); Laurent Romary (Max Planck Inst, Berlin).
Participation in the workshop is free of charge, but the number of
places available is strictly limited. Please visit the website at
http://tei.oucs.ox.ac.uk/Oxford/2006-09-methNet/ *now* to register your
interest -- places will be allocated during July.
Sebastian Rahtz, James Cummings, and Lou Burnard
--
Dr James Cummings, Oxford Text Archive, University of Oxford
James dot Cummings at oucs dot ox dot ac dot uk
Hi all,
here are the links to a couple of interesting articles about Unicode
fonts and Linux that I bookmarked some time ago, hope you'll find them
useful:
KMFL lets users change keyboards on the fly
http://www.linux.com/article.pl?sid=06/03/13/1829212
[A linux equivalent of the well known Keyman keyboard mapping software
under Windows]
Graphite: Smart font technology comes to FOSS
http://www.linux.com/article.pl?sid=06/03/15/1649204
[A "smart font" technology comparable to OpenType and Advanced Apple
Typography, available for both Linux and Windows]
Ciao
--
Roberto Rosselli Del Turco roberto.rossellidelturco at unito.it
Dipartimento di Scienze rosselli at ling.unipi.it
del Linguaggio Then spoke the thunder DA
Universita' di Torino Datta: what have we given? (TSE)
Hige sceal the heardra, heorte the cenre,
mod sceal the mare, the ure maegen litlath. (Maldon 312-3)
Bonjour à tous,
Nous sommes heureux de vous annoncer la mise en ligne de la première
publication électronique en ligne d'un manuscrit liturgique et musical
du Moyen Âge, 14ème ouvrage de la collection ELEC
(http://elec.enc.sorbonne.fr) : Le Graduel prémontré de Bellelay (XII^e
siècle) disponible à l'adresse http://bellelay.enc.sorbonne.fr dont la
publication a été dirigée par Olivier Cullin, professeur à l'université
de Tours et chercheur au CESCM de Poitiers.
Conservé à la bibliothèque cantonale jurassienne à Porrentruy (Suisse),
c'est l'une des premières sources de l'ordre de Prémontré contenant le
répertoire complet pour le cycle liturgique annuel. L'origine
problématique de ce manuscrit et le contenu musical original font de
cette source un témoin précieux de la vie liturgique et musicale médiévale.
Cet ouvrage donne un fac-similé intégral en couleur du manuscrit, qui
peut être feuilleté page par page, enrichi d'une critique génétique par
des dossiers d'analyse de pièces remarquables. Une introduction
générale, une étude spécifique et un index complètent la présentation de
cette édition
Une interface simple de consultation, une navigation souple et aisée,
des modules de recherche efficaces pour une publication accessible
librement et gratuitement
Cette édition a été réalisée avec le soutien du Centre nationale de la
recherche scientifique (CNRS), de la bibliothèque cantonale jurassienne
à Porrentruy (Suisse), de la République et Canton du Jura (Suisse), de
l'atelier d'Axiane (Suisse) et du Centre d'études supérieures de la
civilisation médiévale de Poitiers (Poitiers).
Nous vous souhaitons bonne lecture et restons à votre disposition pour
toutes remarques ou questions.
Cordialement
Gautier Poupeau,
Responsable du site Web et des éditions électroniques de l'Ecole
nationale des chartes, http://www.enc.sorbonne.fr
1) Digital Medievalist 2.1 now available
I am pleased to announce the publication of the second issue of our
refereed journal, the Digital Medievalist
http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal.cfm.
In this issue
* Experimental markup in a TEI-conformant setting - Particia R. Bart
* Liturgy, Drama, and the Archive: Three conversions from legacy formats
to TEI XML - James Cummings
* P5-MS: A general purpose tagset for manuscript description - M. J.
Driscoll
* Designing the Old English Newsletter bibliography database - Roy M.
Liuzza
* Bernard J. Muir, ed. 2004. A digital facsimile of Oxford, Bodleian
Library MS. Junius 11. Software by Nick Kennedy. Bodleian Library
Digital Texts 1. Oxford: Bodleian Library. - Murray McGillivray
2) Call for papers
With the publication of Digital Medievalist 2.1, Digital Medievalist
will shift over to a rolling publication. This means that accepted
articles will be published as soon as they are copy-edited and proofed,
rather than twice a year. Articles will be grouped into virtual volumes
for archiving and referencing each December and June.
We are seeking contributions on digital topics for publication in our
journal. Our interest is in articles discussing the use of technology to
teach or research medieval topics. Suitable topics include reports on
projects or tools making innovative use of technology, research results
achieved using digital tools or techniques, theoretical or practical
articles on the use of digital technology in medieval studies research
or pedagogy. We accept notes as well as longer articles.
We are especially interested in articles on work in non-Anglophone
culture, articles on innovative uses for computers in teaching, and
research results produced using technology. Articles on other topics
and Anglophone culture are of course also welcome.
All articles are peer-reviewed by experts with appropriate
specialisations in humanities computing and/or medieval studies. Our
rejection rate currently stands at approximately 50%.
DM also publishes reviews of tools, websites, and books/CD-ROMs. To
discuss proposals for articles, recommend a work for review, or to
enquire about opportunities to serve as a reviewer, please contact the
general editor, daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca.
-dan
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
Associate Professor and Chair of English
Director, Digital Medievalist Project
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Canada
Vox +1 (403) 329-2378
Fax +1 (403) 382-7191
daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca
http://www.uleth.ca/http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/