***Apologies for cross posting***
Registration is now
open for the NeDIMAH Expert Seminar on Digital Scholarly Editions organised by Matthew Driscoll
(University of Copenhagen) and Elena Pierazzo (King's College London). NeDIMAH is a network supported by the European Science Foundation.
NeDiMAH working group in digital scholarly editions – Experts’ seminar
Tesselschadezaal, Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands, The Hague, 21 November 2012
Patrick SAHLE, Universität zu Köln (DE) – What is a scholarly digital edition?
Marina BUZZONI, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia (IT) – A 'protocol' for digital scholarly editions? The Italian point of view.
Greta FRANZINI, University College London (UK) – A catalogue of digital editions.
Ray SIEMENS, University of Victoria (CA) – Foundations of the social edition.
Dirk VAN HULLE, Universiteit Antwerpen (BE) – Digital genetic editing and manuscript literacy.
Roberto ROSSELLI DEL TURCO, Università di Torino (IT) – The battle we forgot to fight: Should we make a case for digital editions?
Cynthia DAMON, University of Pennsylvania (US) – A digital workspace for Latin textual criticism.
Jennifer LO, King's College London (UK) – Dimensionality in print and digital editions of Henslowe’s Diary.
Camille DESENCLOS, École nationale des chartes (FR) – Rethinking digital editions for early modern correspondences: A new approach to edition
at the École nationale des Chartes.
Krista Stinne Greve RASMUSSEN, Københavns Universitet (DK) – Reading or using a digital edition? Reader roles in scholarly editions.
Joris VAN ZUNDERT, Huygens ING (NL) – The practice of theory and tools: A theoretical framework for quality assessment of tools for digital
scholarly editing.
16.30-17.30
Roundtable: Matthew Driscoll, Elena Pierazzo, Mats
Dalhstrom, Michael Stolz, Peter Boot, Florence Clavaud, Pierre-Yves Buard, Caroline
Macé, with intervention from Ray Siemens, Dirk Van Hulle, Roberto Rosselli Del Turco and Marina Buzzoni.
Our meeting will be in the Tesselschadezaal in the Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands (Huygens ING), which is located
at the National Library of The Netherlands, right next to The Hague Central Station. A map and directions can be found at http://www.huygens.knaw.nl/en/contact/bereikbaarheid/.