Dear Colleagues,
Apologies for cross-posting. A new issue of Digital Philology came out during the summer. This new number contains cutting-edge research on:
*Race and iconography in the Roman de la rose (by Nadia R. Altschul)
*Medieval manuscript practices and new media (by Farkas Gábor Kiss, Eyal Poleg, Lucie Dole¾alová, Rafal Wójcik)
*The genealogy of one of Arnaut Daniel's most famous rhymes (by Andrew Lemons)
*Quantitative analysis and authorship attribution in Chrétien de Troyes's Lancelot (by Brian J. Reilly and Moira R. Dillon)
*Vernacular legal language in medieval Iberia (by Jesús Rodríguez-Velasco)
This installment also includes a MS study on the Fisher antiphonary (by Ilana Krug) and two reviews of books and digital projects.
You may find the TOC here, and access the contents through Project Muse:
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/digital_philology/toc/dph.2.1.html .
With best wishes for the beginning of the academic year,
Albert
Albert Lloret, PhD
Managing Editor, Digital Philology
Assistant Professor of Spanish and Catalan
University of Massachusetts Amherst
http://umass.academia.edu/AlbertLloret