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Digital Humanities 2008
| Five presentations from faculty and staff affiliated with the Collaboratory
for Research in Computing for Humanities were recently accepted to the Digital Humanities 2008
Conference. DH2008 is the official conference of the Alliance of Digital Humanities
Organizations (ADHO), which is comprised of the Association for Computers and the Humanities
(ACH), the Association of Literary and
Linguistic Computing (ALLC), and The
Society for Digital Humanities / Société pour l'étude des médias
interactifs (SDH-SEMI), the three major digital humanities organizations
in the United States, Europe, and Canada. These presentations include one
session, two papers, and two posters. The number of presentations and breadth
of participation (including faculty from Russian, Classics, Hispanic Studies,
and Computer Science) illustrates the University of Kentucky's excellence in
digital humanities. |
- "Russian Folk Religious Imagination", a poster presentation by Jeanmarie
Rouhier-Willoughby, Russian, with Mark Richard Lauersdorf and Dot Porter
- "Using and Extending FRBR for the Digital Library for the Enlightenment
and the Romantic Period – The Spanish Novel (DLER-SN)", a poster
presentation by Ana Rueda, Hispanic Studies, with Mark Richard Lauersdorf
and Dot Porter
- "Recent work in the EDUCE Project", a paper presentation by Brent
Seales, Computer Science, and Ross Scaife, Classics
- "Taking Advantage of the TEI Header", a paper presentation by Dot Porter
and Syd Baumann (Women's Writer's Project, Brown University)
- "The Homer Multitext Project", a session consisting of three papers:
- "The Homer Multitext Project: An Introduction", by Casey Dué
(Classics, University of Houston) and Mary Ebbott (Classics, College
of the Holy Cross)
- "Imaging the Venetus A Manuscript for the Homer Multitext", by Ryan
Baumann, Computer Science, Brent Seales, Computer Science, and Ross
Scaife, Classics
- "The Homer Multitext: Infrastructure and Applications", by
Christopher Blackwell (Classics, Furman University) and Neel Smith
(Classics, College of the Holy Cross)
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© 2005-2006 Research in Computing for
Humanities
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