Advances in Digital Scholarly Editing : Papers presented at the DiXiT conferences in the Hague, Cologne, and Antwerp

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Advances in Digital Scholarly Editing : Papers presented at the DiXiT conferences in the Hague, Cologne, and Antwerp

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Full Description

As the papers in this volume testify, digital scholarly editing is a vibrant practice. Scholarly editing has a long-standing tradition in the humanities. It is of crucial importance within disciplines such as literary studies, philology, history, philosophy, library and information science, and bibliography. In fact, digital scholarly editing represents one of the longest traditions in the field of Digital Humanities — and the theories, concepts, and practices that were designed for editing in a digital environment have in turn deeply influenced the development of Digital Humanities as a discipline. By bringing together the extended abstracts from three conferences organised within the DiXiT project (2013-2017), this volume shows how digital scholarly editing is still developing and constantly redefining itself.

DiXiT (Digital Scholarly Editing Initial Training) is one of the most innovative training networks for a new generation of scholars in the field of digital scholarly editing, established by ten European leading institutions from academia, in close collaboration with the private sector and cultural heritage institutions, and funded under the EU's Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions. The partners together represent a wide variety of technologies and approaches to European digital scholarly editing.

The extended abstracts of the convention contributions assembled in this volume showcase the multiplicity of subjects dealt with in and around the topics of digital editing: from issues of sustainability to changes in publications cultures, from the integrity of research and intellectual rights to mixed methods applied to digital editing—to name only a few.

Contents

Andreas Speer, Welcome

Arianna Ciula, Gregory Crane, Hans Walter Gabler, Espen Ore, Preface

Peter Boot, Franz Fischer, Dirk van Hulle, Introduction

 

List of beneficiaries

List of DiXiT fellows

Acknowledgements

 

Part 1: Theory, Practice, Methods

 

Francisco Javier Álvarez Carbajal, Towards a TEI model for the encoding of diplomatic charters: The charters of the County of Luna at the end of the Middle Ages

 

Mateusz Antoniuk, The Uncommon Literary Draft and its Editorial Representation

 

Gioele Barabucci, Franz Fischer, The formalization of textual criticism: bridging the gap between automated collation and edited critical texts

 

Gioele Barabucci, Elena Spadini, Magdalena Turska, Data vs Presentation. What is the core of a Scholarly Digital Edition?

 

Elli Bleeker, Modelling process and the process of modelling: the genesis of a modern literary Text

 

Christine Blondel, Marco Segala, Towards open, multi-source, and multi-authors digital scholarly editions. The Ampère platform.

 

Ben Brumfield, Accidental editors

 

Fabio Ciotti, Toward a new realism for digital textuality

 

Arianna Ciula, Modelling Textuality: A Material Culture Framework

 

Claire Clivaz, Multimodal Literacies and Continuous Data Publishing: une question de rythme

 

Isabel de la Cruz-Cabanillas, Editing the Medical Recipes in the Glasgow University Library Ferguson Collection

 

Richard Cunningham, Theorizing a Digital Scholarly Edition of Paradise Lost

 

Tom De Keyser, Vincent Neyt, Mark Nixon, Dirk van Hulle, The Digital Libraries of James Joyce and Samuel Beckett

 

Paul Eggert, The archival impulse and the editorial impulse

 

Ulrike Henny, Pedro Sepúlveda, Pessoa's editorial projects and publications: the digital edition as a multiple form of textual criticism

 

Maurizio Lana et al, "...but what should I put in a digital apparatus?" A not-so-obvious choice. New types of digital scholarly editions

 

Caroline Macé, Critical editions and the digital medium

 

Chaim Milikowsky, Scholarly Editions of Three Rabbinic Texts One Critical and Two Digital

 

Sara Norja, From manuscript to digital edition: The challenges of editing early English alchemical texts

 

Chiara Palladino, Towards a digital edition of the Minor Greek Geographers

 

Elsa Pereira, Challenges of a digital approach: considerations for an edition of Pedro Homem de Mello's poetry

 

Thorsten Ries, Hands-on Workshop: The Born Digital Record of the Writing Process. Discussing Concepts of Representation for the DSE

 

Mehdy Sedaghat Payam, Digital Editions and Materiality, a Media-specific Analysis of the First and the Last Edition of Michael Joyce's Afternoon

 

Peter Shillingsburg, Enduring Distinctions in Textual Studies

 

Alex Speed Kjeldsen, Reproducible Editions

 

Andreas Speer, Blind Spots of Digital Editions: The Case of Huge Text Corpora in Philosophy, Theology and the History of Sciences

 

Linda Spinazzè, Richard Hadden, Misha Broughton, Data Driven Editing: Materials, Product, and Analysis

 

Katrhyn Sutherland, Making Copies

 

Georgy Vekshin, Ekaterina Khomyakova, The Videotext Project: Solutions for the New Age of Digital Genetic Reading

 

Klaus Wachtel, A Stemmatological Approach in Editing the Greek New Testament: The Coherence-Based Genealogical Method

 

Part 2: Technology, Standards, Software

 

Tara Andrews, What We Talk About When We Talk About Collation

 

Dániel Balogh, The Growing Pains of an Indic Epigraphic Corpus

 

Elli Bleeker, Bram Buitendijk, Ronald Haentjens Dekker, Vincent Neyt and Dirk van Hulle, The Challenges of Automated Collation of Manuscripts

 

Federico Boschetti, Riccardo Del Gratta, Angelo Del Grosso, The role of digital scholarly editors in the design of components for cooperative philology

 

Stefan Budenbender, Inventorying, transcribing, collating: basic components of a virtual platform for scholarly editing, developed for the Historical-Critical Schnitzler Edition

 

Mathias Coeckelbergs, Seth van Hooland and Pierre Van Hecke, Combining Topic Modeling and Fuzzy Matching Techniques to Build Bridges between Primary and Secondary Source Materials. A Test Case from the King James Version Bible

 

Angelo Mario Del Grosso, Emiliano Giovannetti, Simone Marchi, The Importance of Being... Object-Oriented: Old Means for New Perspectives in Digital Textual Scholarship

 

Chiara Di Pietro, Roberto Rosselli Del Turco, Edition Visualization Technology 2.0: affordable DSE publishing, support for critical editions, and more

 

Vera Faßhauer, Multi-Level Annotation, Analysis and Edition of a Historical Text Corpus: Private Ducal Correspondences in Early Modern Germany

 

Jiří Flaišman, Michal Kosák and Jakub Říha, Hybrid Scholarly Edition and the Visualization of Textual Variants

 

Costanza Giannaccini, Burckhardtsource.org: where Scholarly Edition and Semantic Digital Library meet

 

Elena González-Blanco et al, Evi-Linhd, A Virtual Research Environment For Digital Scholarly Editing

 

Charles Li, Critical diplomatic editing. Applying text-critical principles as algorithms

 

Frederike Neuber, St-G and DIN 16518, or: requirements on type classification in the Stefan George edition

 

Elisa Nury, Visualizing Collation Results

 

Dirk Roorda, The Hebrew Bible as Data: Text and Annotations

 

Felicia Roșu, Full Dublin-Core Jacket: The Constraints and Rewards of Managing a Growing Collection of Sources on Omeka.net

 

Daniela Schulz, Of general and homemade encoding problems

 

Elena Spadini, The role of the base manuscript in the collation of medieval texts

 

Tuomo Toljamo, A Tailored Approach to Digitally Access and Prepare the 1740 Dutch Resolutions of the States General

 

Tuomo Toljamo, Editorial Tools and their Development as a Mode of Mediated Interaction

 

Magdalena Turska, TEI Simple Processing Model

 

Part 3: Academia, Cultural Heritage, Society

 

Hilde Boe, Edvard Munch's Writings. Experiences From Digitising The Museum

 

Misha Broughton, Crowdfunding the Digital ScholarlyEdition: Webcomics, Tip Jars, and a Bowl of Potato Salad

 

Jan Burgers, Editing medieval charters in the digital age

 

Federico Caria, What the people do with, around (and at the centre) of the digital editions

 

Wout Dillen, Editing Copyrighted Materials: On Sharing What You Can

 

Wout Dillen, What You C(apture) Is What You Get. Authenticity and Quality Control in Digitization Practices

 

Till Grallert, The journal al-Muqtabas between Shamela.ws, HathiTrust, and GitHub: producing open, collaborative, and fully-referencable digital editions of early Arabic periodicals—with almost no funds

 

Leo Jansen, Digital editions of artists' writings: first Van Gogh, then Mondrian

 

Aodhán Kelly, Digital editing: valorisation and diverse audiences

 

Aodhán Kelly, Social responsibilities in digital editing - DiXiT Panel: 'Editing and Society: Cultural considerations for construction, dissemination and preservation of editions'

 

Merisa Martinez, Documenting the digital edition on film

 

Katerina Michalopoulou, Antonis Touloumis, Digital Rockaby

 

Daniel Powell, Towards a definition of "the social" in knowledge work

 

Anna-Maria Sichani, Beyond Open Access: (re)use, impact and the ethos of openness in digital editing

 

Anna-Maria Sichani, The business logic of digital scholarly editing and the economics of scholarly publishing

 

Ray Siemens et al, The Social Edition in the Context of Open Social Scholarship: The Case of the Devonshire Manuscript (BL Add Ms 17,492)

 

Bartłomiej Szleszyński, Nowa Panorama Literatury Polskiej (New Panorama of Polish Literature) - how to present knowledge on the Internet (Polish specifics of the issue)

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