Beyond the Facsimile: Rich Models of Late Medieval and Early Modern Texts

A Digital Humanities Day on Monday 13 December 2010 at Sheffield Hallam University

On 13 December 2010 Sheffield Hallam University, in association with the University of Victoria, will host a one-day symposium entitled “Beyond the Facsimile: Rich Models of Late Medieval and Early Modern Texts”.

It’s concerned with doing more, and doing things better, with our digital surrogates of books and pictures from the 15th to the 17th centuries. We’ve gotten very good at taking pictures of impressed papers, inscribed parchments, and painted canvases, but computer models do not have to be merely pictures.

The symposium will present eight talks from international scholars working in this area, each offering their own perspectives on the future of computerized representations of important documents. Speakers and their titles can be found at http://gabrielegan.com/BTF.

The meeting is open to anyone who wants to hear the papers and coffee and a free lunch will be provided to all who email the organizer, Gabriel Egan (mail@gabrielegan.com), by 13 November. (It is quite acceptable to simply turn up on the day without giving advance notice, but then you can’t have the free lunch.) Exact details of the venue, with maps and transportation advice, will appear on the symposium web-page at the above address.

Programme

(Speakers please note that paper slots are 30 minutes, including questions)

9.30-10am Coffee on arrival

10-10.15am Gabriel Egan (Loughborough University) “Welcome and Aims of the Meeting”

10.15-10.45am Takako Kato (Leicester University) “The Virtues and Challenges of XML: Making a Digital Edition of Malory’s Morte Darthur”

10.45-11.15am Paul Vetch (King’s College London) “A Map for All Seasons: Experimenting with the Gough Map”

11.15-11.30am Coffee

11.30am-12noon James Cummings (University of Oxford) “Interrogating and Accessing Digital Scholarly Editions”

12noon-12.30pm John Bradley and Stephen Pigney (King’s College London) “Images and Text: Towards an Understanding of the Early Modern Illustrated Book”

12.30-1.15pm Lunch

1.15-1.45pm Ari Friedlander (University of Michigan) “Are We Being Digital Yet?”

1.45-2.15pm Shawn Martin (University of Pennsylvania) “Images, Texts, and Records: Tools for Teaching in a Confusing Landscape”

2.15-2.30pm Coffee

2.30-3pm Eugene Giddens (Anglia Ruskin University) “The Death of Digital Editions”

3-3.20pm Ray Siemens (University of Victoria) “Beyond the Facsimile”

3.30-4pm Round Table involving all speakers

________________________________

Description of Topic

For many late medieval and early modern texts researchers have access to rudimentary digital representations. Virtually all books printed in Britain before 1800 are available as digital facsimiles via the databases Early English Books Online (EEBO) and ECCO (Eighteenth Century Collections Online). The former also provides searchable electronic transcriptions for about a quarter of the corpus–via the Text Creation Partnership (TCP)–and the latter is completely searchable, albeit via unreliable ‘dirty’ electronic texts produced by Optical Character Recognition (OCR). For virtually all texts that may be considered literary we also have relatively reliable searchable electronic texts made by double-keyboarding for the Literature Online (LION) project. For a small number of texts of special interest there are digital editions of much higher quality. The Scholarly Digital Editions of Chaucer’s poetry combine high-resolution colour facsimiles of multiple manuscripts with accurate scholarly searchable transcriptions of them, and the Shakespeare Quartos Archive project aims to do the same for early printed editions of his plays and poems that reside in major research libraries. However, with even the best of these enhanced resources, there remain important scholarly questions that cannot be answered without going back to the original documents, which is not an option for most researchers.

Facsimiles are good for seeing the surface image of ink inscribed or impressed onto paper or parchment, but not for taking accurate measurements of the size of the writing nor for examing the deformation of the surface caused by the impressure of the ink. (The only reliable way to tell which side of a sheet was printed first is to look for the bumps made by the type pressing into it.) Electronic transcriptions can accurately reflect the writing’s letters and punctuation marks but not the competing hypotheses about the creation of a document that scholars may want to test using the transcription. For example, a print edition may have been typeset by two compositors, each expressing spelling preferences from which we may distinguish their work-stints. Where two scholars disagree about the division of these stints, an electronic transcription that encodes each hypothesis would allow questions of the kind “if Scholar X is right about the division of the stints, what is Compositor A’s preference in the spelling of the word Lady/Ladie? And what if Scholar Y is right about the stints?”. There remains a lot to be done in digitizing texts for the purposes of scholarly research on them.

This Digital Humanities Day at Sheffield Hallam University is an opportunity for those concerned with the use of advanced digital surrogates (whether as creators or as readers) to discuss the following:

  • The state of the art in the creation of electronic versions of texts used by scholars in the humanities
  • The advantages and disadvantages of particular technologies for going beyond the facsimile, for example 3D modelling of paper/parchment versus advanced textual encoding
  • The kinds of questions that cannot currently be answered by the digital surrogates we have, and how best to produce surrogates that suit our needs
  • Case studies of particular projects, their achievements and the lessons learnt

Those interested in attending or speaking should contact Gabriel Egan: mail@gabrielegan.com.

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)

TEI MM 2010 Conference program published

The program committee for TEI MM 2010 in Zadar, Croatia proudly presents the program for this years conference to you. Currently available at [1], you will soon also be able to peruse it from the conference web page.

There might be still some minor adjustments necessary, but we think it will basically stand as it is now.

I would also like to inform you that the program committee together with the local organizers decided to impose a 20% surcharge on all registrations received after Oct. 25, due to the organizational overhead this will cause. So, to ensure a smooth preparation and to avoid unnecessary surcharges, please go to the TEI webshop [2] at your earliest convenience to register for the conference, if you have not done so yet. There are also a few seats left in the pre-conference workshops, which can be booked from the same page.

Looking forward to see all of you soon,
for the program committee,

Christian Wittern (Chair)

[1] http://www.tei-c.org/conftool/sessions.php
[2] http://tei-shop.org


Christian Wittern
Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University
47 Higashiogura-cho, Kitashirakawa, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8265, JAPAN

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)

Call for papers: Securing the Past, Rescuing the Present

*From: *John Gouws > *Date: *15 September 2010 12:27:57 BST
*Subject: **Call for papers: please circulate*

First Call for Papers

Securing the Past, Rescuing the Present:
a workshop and symposium on cross-disciplinary theory and practice.

North-West University, Potchefstroom
24-26 February 2011

Following the publication of Paul Eggerts Securing the Past: Conservation in Art, Architecture and Literature (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009), the symposium is intended to further the interdisciplinary conversation concerning the fabric, texts, scores and performances of representational and plastic art, buildings, sites, literature and music. The initial workshop will be designed to open up the conversation for those working within a single discipline and for younger scholars unaware of the possibilities of the field. Participants will include Paul Eggert (Australian Research Council Professorial Fellow, University of New South Wales at ADFA), Dyfri Williams (Research Keeper of Greek and Roman Antiquities, The British Museum), and Dirk van Hulle (University of Antwerp). Participation and submission of proposals from scholars working in any related fields, especially music, will be welcomed. Proposals for papers of forty or fifty minutes, with twenty/ten min
utes of discussion time, should be sent to John Gouws (john.gouws@gmail.com ) by 31 October. Parallel sessions are not envisaged.

Posted by: Dan O’Donnell (daniel.odonnell@uleth.ca).

Imbas 2010

We would like to invite all postgraduate students of medieval studies to Imbas 2010, an interdisciplinary postgraduate medievalists’ conference, to be held on 12th – 14th November 2010 in NUI Galway, Ireland. This conference welcomes delegates at all stages of their research from all areas of medieval studies including languages, history, literature, art, archaeology, palaeography and philosophy.

The theme for 2010 is Representations: Image, Word, Artefact, and we are delighted to announce that Professor Michelle P. Brown of the University of London will be our keynote speaker.

Delegates are encouraged to view the theme as a broad suggestion rather than in any way restrictive, and all variations on this theme will be welcome.

A selection of papers will be published in our peer-reviewed Imbas Journal. This journal will be made available via our website and open-access journal databases. All panels will be recorded and made available as podcasts.

Abstracts of 250 words for a twenty minute paper must be submitted before September 30, 2010. Abstracts can be sent to imbasnuig@gmail.com or forwarded to Imbas/Trish NMhaoileoin, c/o Roinn na Gaeilge, as na Gaeilge, Ollscoil na hreann, Gaillimh, re.

Further information can be found at our website http://medieval.starlight.ie/cms/view/63 and on our Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/group.php?gid=324841995338&ref=ts .

Posted by: Imbas Committee (imbasnuig@gmail.com).

Research Foundations for Understanding Books and Reading in the Digital Age: Textual Methodologies and Exemplars

15 December 2010
Koninklijke Bibliotheek (National Library of the Netherlands), The Hague in conjunction with the conference Text & Literacy (16-17 December)

Proposals due 30 September 2010

Digital technology is fundamentally altering the way we relate to writing, reading, and the human record itself. The pace of that change has created a gap between core social/cultural practices that depend on stable reading and writing environments and the new kinds of digital artefacts–electronic books being just one type of many–that must sustain those practices now and into the future.

This one-day gathering explores research foundations pertinent to understanding those new practices and emerging media, specifically focusing on work in textual method, in itself and via exemplar, leading toward [1] theorizing the transmission of culture in pre- and post-electronic media, [2] documenting the facets of how people experience information as readers and writers, [3] designing new kinds of interfaces and artifacts that afford new reading abilities, [4] conceptualizing the issues necessary to provide information to these new reading and communicative environments, and [5] reflection on interdisciplinary team research strategies pertinent to work in the area.

The gathering is offered in conjunction with the /Text & Literacy/ conference (16-17 December) and is sponsored by the Koninklijke Bibliotheek (the National Library of the Netherlands), the Book and Digital Media Studies department of Leiden University, and the Implementing New Knowledge Environments research group.

We invite paper and poster/demonstration proposals that address these and other issues pertinent to research in the area. Proposals should contain a title, an abstract (of approximately 250 words) plus list of works cited, and the names, affiliations, and website URLs of presenters; fuller papers will be solicited after acceptance of the proposal. Please send proposals before 30 September 2010 to siemens@uvic.ca.

____________

R.G. Siemens, English, University of Victoria, PO Box 3070 STN CSC,
Victoria, BC, Canada. V8W 3W1. Ph.(250)721-7272 Fax.(250)721-6498
siemens@uvic.ca http://web.uvic.ca/~siemens/

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)