Reviews of Online Resources: Call for DM 6

Dear all,

This is a call for contributions for the next issue of the Digital Medievalist journal (http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/). As we all know, there are now many scholarly resources which have been published online as websites but which have never been reviewed as scholarly publications. This is a problem both for us as practitioners and for the discipline in general, not least because it can imply that these publications are somehow less scholarly. Furthermore, the career of academics and research departments often depends on having reviewed publications, as a result of which many online publications are inadmissible for tenure, research assessment and the like.

This problem is being addressed by bodies such as the MLA, but still there are relatively few reviews being written. To help encourage this process, the editors at DM have decided to take action and will include as many of these reviews as we can manage in our next issue (and thereafter). We therefore ask (a) for suggestions of resources that should be reviewed, and (b) offers from reviewers. Of course the ideal is to offer both a resource and a review.
As usual, reviews should be approximately 1,500 words and should consider the publication both from the ‘digital’ and ‘medieval/humanities’ standpoints. We are interested primarily in projects on medieval topics, but as always we are open to anything of interest to medievalists. See the journal’s Submission Guidelines for further details (http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/1.1/submission/).

Please note also that we are thinking specifically of freely available online publications, not printed books, CD-ROM publications or subscription-only resources (although we will of course still consider reviews of these as usual). In particular, this means that we cannot promise reviewers copies of the publication being reviewed, or access to subscription-only sites.

Thanks, and we look forward to your suggestions,

The Editors, Digital Medievalist
editors@digitalmedievalist.org

Digital Medievalist is an international web-based Community of Practice for medievalists working with digital media (http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/). Our on-line, refereed Journal accepts work of original research and scholarship, notes on technological topics (markup and stylesheets, tools and software, etc.), commentary pieces discussing developments in the field, bibliographic and review articles, and project reports.

Posted by: Peter Stokes (pas53@cam.ac.uk).

Symposium on TEI and Scholarly Publishing * Dublin, Ireland * 28 April 2010

*Please circulate*

Symposium on TEI and Scholarly Publishing
http://dho.ie/node/673

Wednesday, 28 April 2010
Royal Irish Academy, 19 Dawson Street, Dublin 2

The TEI Council and the Digital Humanities Observatory, a project of the Royal Irish Academy, invite you to participate in a one-day Symposium on TEI and Scholarly Publishing, to be held 28 April 2010 in conjunction with a meeting of the TEI Council. Invited speakers from universities, publishing organizations, and private industry will identify current difficulties in making publication systems interoperable and identify priority actions for the TEI to intervene in this arena.

During the presentations, there will be simultaneous discussion in the backchannel #teipublishing and in a publicly readable and editable Google Docs file for collaborative identification of priority actions for the TEI. To avoid infestation by spambots, we will not include the actual URL in announcements. Please type “docs.google.com” into your browser and then paste the following after it:

/Doc?id=dv3dx7h_12gtqzjxg5

We encourage participation on the backchannel and in this collaborative writing exercise by all, even those unable to attend in person.

Registration to attend in person is free but required. For further information, please see http://dho.ie/node/673

Posted by: Kevin Hawkins (kevin.s.hawkins@ULTRASLAVONIC.INFO).

Invitation to Participate in a Digital Humanities Study

Dear Colleague,
Implementing New Knowledge Environments (INKE) is a large-scale collaborative research project in the digital humanities directed by Dr. Ray Siemens, Department of English, University of Victoria, and funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). Our research team is examining the complex processes of human engagement with information that is available digitally. Specifically, we are interested in identifying and understanding the ways in which social sciences and humanities readers engage with forms such as the electronic scholarly edition, the academic monograph, scholarly journal and essay collections, and electronic literature.

With this letter, we are inviting you to complete a short survey about how you experience and use digital resources in the context of your research. The findings of this survey will be used to improve existing digital tools and to derive requirements for prospective tools and resources that we hope will be of benefit to you and other researchers.

The questionnaire should take approximately twenty minutes to complete. If you are willing to participate, you will find it online at . Your identity will be kept confidential. All documents and participants will be identified only by code number. Digital data records will be kept on password-protected hard drives and on disks stored in locked filing cabinets. Only the principal investigator and the co-investigators will have access to the data. If you have any concerns about your treatment or rights as a research participant, you may contact the Research Subject Information Line in the UBC Office of Research Services at 604-822-8598. Your participation in this study is entirely voluntary and you may refuse to participate or withdraw from the study at any time. Your completion and submission of the survey will indicate your consent to participate.
In consideration of your time, you may enter a draw for a $150.00 gift certificate from an online bookstore upon completion of the questionnaire.

We look forward to the prospect of your participation in this study. Please feel free to contact the INKE Graduate Research Assistant, Karen Taylor, at any time if you have questions about this research: 604-737-2873 (British Columbia, Canada) or katay164@interchange.ubc.ca.

Best regards,

Dr. Teresa Dobson for the INKE Team
Associate Professor
Director, Digital Literacy Centre
University of British Columbia
c/o Department of Language & Literacy
2125 Main Mall,
Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z4

Posted by: Karen Taylor (katay164@interchange.ubc.ca).

Numérisation du patrimoine écrit: du projet scientifique à sa mise en œuvre. L’exemple de «Europeana regia»

Numérisation du patrimoine écrit : du projet scientifique à sa mise en œuvre. L’exemple de « Europeana regia »

30 et 31 mars 2010

INP-BNF, Auditorium Colbert, 2 rue Vivienne 75002 Paris
Entrée libre
Reservations, renseignements : emilie.maume@inp.fr

Parallèlement au lancement de programmes de masse consacrés aux livres imprimés et à la presse, la numérisation des manuscrits et des archives écrites devient progressivement un enjeu majeur des politiques scientifiques et de valorisation du patrimoine écrit.

D’abord cantonnée à des projets limités ou consacrés aux « trésors » des institutions qui les conservent, elle prend aujourd’hui de nouvelles dimensions, souvent dans le cadre de projets coopératifs, nationaux ou internationaux.

Le lancement du projet européen Europeana Regia, consacré à trois grands ensembles de manuscrits du Moyen Âge et de la Renaissance aujourd’hui dispersés, est l’occasion de faire le point sur cette question. Le colloque, qui associe présentation de réalisations effectives, projets en cours ou en gestation, aspects techniques et scientifiques, se veut tout à la fois réflexif, pratique et opérationnel. Il est destiné aux responsables de collections, aux chefs de projets, aux chargés de numérisation, dans les Bibliothèques, les Musées et les Archives.

Comité scientifique : Thierry Delcourt, conservateur général des bibliothèques, directeur du département des Manuscrits de la BnF et Gennaro Toscano, professeur des universités, directeur de la recherche et des relations scientifiques de l’INP

Organisation : Emilie Maume, chargée des manifestations culturelles et scientifiques et du mécénat

Mardi 30 mars

9h 30
Ouverture du colloque
Eric Gross, directeur de l’Institut national du patrimoine
Bruno Racine, président de la Bibliothèque nationale de France

9h 45
La numérisation du patrimoine, politique stratégique du Ministère de la Culture
Philippe Bélaval, directeur général des patrimoines, MCC
Jacqueline Sanson, directrice générale de la Bibliothèque nationale de France

10h 15
Le projet « Europeana regia » et son intégration dans les politiques de numérisation des bibliothèques
Thierry Delcourt, directeur du département des manuscrits, BnF
Claudia Fabian, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich

11h
La numérisation des manuscrits carolingiens : choix scientifiques, critères de conservation
Modérateur : Thierry Delcourt
Charlotte Denoël, département des manuscrits, BnF
Marie-Pierre Dion, directrice de la Bibliothèque municipale de Valenciennes

11h 45
La reconstitution virtuelle d’une bibliothèque perdue : la librairie de Charles V
Modérateur : Thierry Delcourt
Marie-Hélène Tesnière, département des manuscrits, BnF
Ann Kelders, cabinet des manuscrits, Bibliothèque royale de Belgique
Yann Sordet, bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève

12h 30
Déjeuner

14h
La librairie des rois aragonais de Naples
Modérateur : Frédéric D. Martin, département de la coopération, BnF
Gennaro Toscano, directeur de la recherche et des relations scientifiques, Institut national du patrimoine
Marie-Pierre Laffitte, chef du service des manuscrits médiévaux, BnF
Henry Ferreira-Lopes, directeur de la bibliothèque municipale de Besançon

14h 45
Les manuscrits de Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Modérateur : Frédéric D. Martin, département de la coopération, BnF
Michèle Sacquin, département des manuscrits, BnF
Barbara Roth, Bibliothèque de Genève
C. De Alberto, Bibliothèque de l’Assemblée nationale (sous réserves)

15h 30
Pause

16h
Des catalogues aux métadonnées
Modératrice : Emmanuelle Bermès, département de l’information bibliographique et numérique, BnF
Matthieu Bonicel, département des manuscrits, BnF
Florent Palluault, service du livre et de la lecture, MCC
Matthieu Gerbault, responsable du patrimoine, bibliothèque municipale de Reims

17h
Aspects techniques de la numérisation du patrimoine écrit
Modérateur : Marie-Elise Fréon, département de la conservation, BnF
Lotfi Belkhir, Kirtas Technologies
Hermann und Kramer, I2S

Symposium on Digital Imaging of Ancient Textual Heritage

Digital Imaging of Ancient Textual Heritage: Technological Challenges and Solutions
28-29 October 2010 in Helsinki, Finland.
Organizer: The Academy of Finland Research Unit Ancient Greek written sources (CoE)
Partner: The National Library of Finland
For more information, see http://www.eikonopoiia.org

The Academy of Finland research unit Ancient Greek written sources (CoE) is organizing a symposium “Digital Imaging of Ancient Textual Heritage: Technological Challenges and Solutions”. The symposium takes place on 28-29 October, 2010, in Helsinki, Finland.

The programme comprises of two plenary sessions that are open for public, two workshops that are intended for the speakers only, and one open session on end-user perspective.

Participation in the symposium is free of charge (however, registration is compulsory). For the accepted speakers the CoE will be covering the travel and accommodation costs.

Maarit Kinnunen
tel. + 358 50 577 9153
maarit.kinnunen@expericon.fi