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Back to Events

Establishing a framework for scholarly editing and publishing in the 21st century

Workshop

Till Grallert, Astrid Meier, Torsten Wollina

Orient-Institut Beirut

March, 08 to March 09, 2015

Flyer (in PDF format)

 

Abstract

Over the last two decades the humanities and their prime object of study as well as their product, the written text, have undergone major transformations that, for a large part, have come from outside, from the realm of engineers and technologists and that are encapsulated in two terms: digital and the internet. The challenge is how we, scholars in the humanities, can actively shape this epistemic shift happening all around us in order to create opportunities for a better understanding of human societies as well as to foster broader access to cultural artefacts and our results. Finally, we are interested in the new forms of participation and collaboration in our researchfrom crowd sourcing to distributed editing. For this it is necessary to become familiar with, if not fluent in, the languages and logics of the new episteme. The workshop aims at exactly that by bringing together people involved in the D and the H of digital humanities—scholars and technologists—to discuss the technical possibilities to improve editorial processes as well as its product(s) and how do we guarantee wide and easy access to our scholarship for the academic community and the wider public.

 

The goal of this workshop is to discuss with editors, publishers, and (proespective) users of our editions scalable long-term solutions and workflows that contribute to the following aims:

 

  1. to radically improve, simplify, and streamline the process of producing editions of predominantly Arabic source texts as well as scholarly texts written in several languages employing Latin and Arabic alphabets;
  2. to produce various forms of presentation—printed books, ebooks, websites, PDFs etc.—with similar content and from a single master text in a highly automated environment;
  3. to build a system that allows future scholarly re-use of our texts—be it computer linguistics, automated indexes, natural entity recognition or linked-data applications.

This workshop is by registration only. To find out more about the programme and register, please contact Till Grallert.

 

 

Programme

9 March: Demands and  possibilities

 

09:30 - 10:00

Welcome

Stefan Leder, Till Grallert, Astrid  Meier, Torsten Wolli­na

10:00- 12:00

Demands

open discussion, input from  conveyors

12:00- 12:30

lunch

13:30 - 15:00

Possibilities: XML, TEl

Mokhtar Ben Henda, Till Grallert

15:00 - 15:30

coffee

15:30- 16:30

Possibilities: Denq

Jorg Hornschemeyer

16:30- 17:00

coffee

17:00- 18:00

Possibilities: Ediarium

Alexander  Czmiel

20:00

Dinner

 

10  March: Experiences and  challenges

9:30-10:00

recap 1st day conveyors

10:00 - 11:30

Experiences: Digital editions of Arabic manuscripts

Cornelius Berthold, Stefan Leder, Daniel Brenn

11:30 - 12:00

coffee

12:00 - 13:30

Experiences:   Semantic   mark-up,  multi-lingual   XML, computational linguistics

Alexander  Czmiel, Mokhtar Ben Henda, Ute Pietruschka

13:30 - 15:00

lunch

15:00 - 16:30

Experiences: Presentation, metadata, linked  data, best practices, standards

Boris Liebrenz, Michael Kaiser, Gerd Winkelhane

16:30- 17:00

coffee

17:00- 18:00

open discussion

 

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