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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Platform{DH}
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20230705T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230705T170000
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20230619T092238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230619T092401Z
UID:1890-1688572800-1688576400@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:Lecture series: Mike Kestemont
DESCRIPTION:The wandering verse: the computational detection of micro-intertexts in medieval literature \nIntertextuality is a ubiquitous concept in literary studies\, which – because of its notoriously open-ended nature – covers a variety of correspondences between texts. Signaling intertexts is an important editorial responsibility\, because it can deepen one’s reading experience of a literary work. Text reuse detection has become a popular task in the computational humanities too\, although its evaluation is complicated by the lack of exhaustively annotated datasets of intertexts. Historic scholarship on medieval epics provides us with a wealthy inventory of micro-intertexts between medieval works\, although their status is still hotly debated. Some philological communities have been keen on identifying intertexts as authorial features\, whereas others have stressed their conventional status\, especially in the wake of the oral-formulaic theory. In this talk\, I will present a study on Middle Dutch epic literature\, as well as an extension of this work to contemporary Middle English literature\, in particular the bookshop theory surrounding the famous Auchinleck manuscript. I will argue that the intricate web woven by computationally detected intertexts can invite radically innovative readings of medieval literature.  \nMike Kestemont\nMike Kestemont is a research professor in the department of Literature at the University of Antwerp (Belgium). He specializes in computational text analysis for the Digital Humanities. Whereas his work has a strong focus on historic literature\, his previous research has covered a wide range of topics in literary history. Together with Folgert Karsdorp and Allen Riddell he has written a textbook on data science for the Humanities. Together with his Polish colleagues Maciej Eder and Jan Rybicki he is involved in the Computational Stylistics Group. Mike lives in Brussels (http://mikekestemont.github.io/)\, tweets in English (@Mike_Kestemont) and codes in Python (https://github.com/mikekestemont).  \nThis lecture is organized in conjunction with the Antwerp Summer University Summer School “Digital Humanities: Computer-assisted genetic editing\, from handwritten text recognition to keystroke logging ”. Registration for the summer school itself has closed\, but attending the speaker’s keynote lecture is free and open to all. Please register by sending an email to platformdh@uantwerpen.be.
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/lecture-series-mike-kestemont/
LOCATION:S.R.118\, Rodestraat 14 (via ingang Lange Winkelstraat)\, Antwerpen\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,CLARIAH-VL,CMG,platform{DH} Lecture Series,Talks
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220627T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220627T170000
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20220614T021001Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220614T021207Z
UID:1777-1656345600-1656349200@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:Lecture series: Peter Stokes
DESCRIPTION:Machine Learning for Digital Scholarly Editions: The Case of eScriptorium\nDigital and computational tools and methods are becoming increasingly part of scholarly activity\, including in Digital Scholarly Editing. One example of this is in transcribing texts from manuscripts\, where machine learning is becoming more and more effective. To this end\, eScriptorium is being developed to leverage Machine Learning to help in transcription\, whether automatic\, semi-automatic or manual. In principle the software should be useful for any type of edition\, in any language and script and from any date. In practice\, however\, this raises many questions\, including to what extent AI can or should be employed in preparing editions\, how much the expert should remain ‘in the loop’\, but also to what extent it is even possible to develop a single tool that can work for everything from Greek papyrus to 20th-century notebooks to Old Vietnamese inscriptions and beyond. This talk will therefore present the current state of the art while also addressing some practical and theoretical questions that remain for the future. \nPeter Stokes\nPeter Stokes is Directeur d’études (approximately ‘research professor’) at the École Pratique des Hautes Études – Université Paris Sciences et Lettres where he works on digital and computational humanities applied to historical writing. He is co-director of eScriptorium\, and other major projects include Principal Investigator for DigiPal\, a European Research Council Starting Grant on new methods in palaeography\, as well as Co-Investigator of Exon Domesday and Models of Authority\, Work Package leader for the Horizon 2020 project RESILIENCE\, and coordinator of a Cluster in Biblissima+ funded by the French PIA. \nThis lecture is organized in conjunction with the Antwerp Summer University Summer School “Digital Humanities: Genetic editing\, from manuscripts to born-digital writing processes”. Registration for the summer school itself has closed\, but attending the speaker’s keynote lecture is free and open to all. Please register by sending an email to platformdh@uantwerpen.be.
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/lecture-series-peter-stokes/
LOCATION:S.R.118\, Rodestraat 14 (via ingang Lange Winkelstraat)\, Antwerpen\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,CLARIAH-VL,CMG,platform{DH} Lecture Series
ORGANIZER;CN="platformDH":MAILTO:platformdh@uantwerpen.be
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220702
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20220301T101518Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220614T015801Z
UID:1737-1656288000-1656719999@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:Antwerp DH Summer School 2022: Genetic editing\, from manuscripts to born-digital writing processes
DESCRIPTION:Intensive 5-day entry level hands-on course on making digital editions of analogue and born-digital texts. In this course\, participants will acquire a set of basic computer skills to design a fully-fledged\, TEI-compatible Digital Scholarly Edition and deploy keystroke logging technology to record and analyse born-digital texts. \nRegistration information:\n\nEarly bird registration deadline: 15 March 2022.\nRegular registration deadline: 15 April 2022.\n\nFor more information and registration\, please visit the website. \nCourse description\nMONDAY | Introduction and Digital Scholarly Editing\nTEI theory and practice \nOn the first day\, we will learn about the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) as the de facto standard for annotating texts in the humanities. We will learn about how TEI relates to XML and related XML technologies and cover general principles such as well-formedness and validity. After a general introduction to XML and the TEI Guidelines\, we will learn how to annotate writing processes in TEI. All theoretical contents will be accompanied by practical encoding exercises. \nAt the end of the day\, Peter Stokes will present a keynote lecture. \nTUESDAY | Manuscript Web\nTEI Publication Environments\, Manuscript Web\, TEI\, CSS \nOn the second day\, we will learn how to turn text-genetic TEI annotations into web-based editions. After introducing workflows for custom-tailored web visualizations in XSLT\, we will look at pret-a-porter solutions. We will compare existing web publication environments for TEI-encoded text corpora and discuss their usability for text-genetic materials in specific. In a hands-on workshop\, we will use Manuscript Web\, a prototypical publication environment for genetic corpora developed in Antwerp\, to turn TEI documents into web-based scholarly editions. In the day’s final session we will form working groups and identify materials (small data sets) for small editions\, which the students will produce on day three. \nWEDNESDAY | Make Your Own Edition\nManuscript Web \nOn the third day\, we will apply the contents of the first two days to our own materials. The students will work individually or in teams on the dataset they chose on day two. The goal is to encode the materials in TEI and to publish them in a small-scale\, web-based edition. In the afternoon we will visit the Plantin-Moretus Museum.​ \nTHURSDAY | Logging and Encoding Born-Digital Writing Processes\nKeystroke Logging\, TEI-XML \nOn the fourth day\, we will start with a creative exercise: writing a short story and logging the writing process with a keystroke logger. We will then use these keystroke logging files to learn the basic technologies involved in making a (genetic) digital edition. As a first step\, we will encode all the textual operations (e.g.\, new text production\, additions\, deletions) in TEI-XML together with the timestamps of each operation. These XML files will be used the next day as we move on to the visualisation of the reconstructions of the digital writing processes. \nFRIDAY | Visualising Born-Digital Writing Processes\nXPath\, XSLT\, HTML\, CSS \nOn the last day\, we will start from the XML documents we developed in class\, and learn how we can prepare them for the web\, by transforming them into HTML through XSLT. We will do this using XPath expressions. This effort will result in a static visualisation of the writing process. We will learn the basics of CSS by modifying the visualisation. Having gained experience with XPath\, XSLT and HTML\, the XML files will later be uploaded in an environment provided by the instructors that allows for replaying the writing process as well. We will end the day with student presentations and a final discussion.
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/antwerp-dh-summer-school-2022-genetic-editing-from-manuscripts-to-born-digital-writing-processes/
LOCATION:UAntwerp City Campus\, Prinsstraat 13\, Antwerp\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,ASU in DH,CLARIAH-VL,CMG,Summer Schools,Training
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/d483cf7a-c4fe-41f6-a8c2-c8e6ea79eb73.webp.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200629
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200704
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20200123T085303Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200603T115134Z
UID:1374-1593388800-1593820799@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:Antwerp DH Summer School 2020: Making a Digital Edition. Basic Skills and Technologies
DESCRIPTION:Important!\n\nSadly\, this event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. We hope to see you again next year.\n\n  \nIn the past few decades\, digital editing and digitisation of archival documents have been rapidly gaining prominence. Aiming to cater for both of these branches of Digital Humanities\, our summer school offers an in-depth\, hands-on curriculum to familiarise students with basic and more advanced tools in the field. Apart from acquiring a set of technical skills (including Command Line\, HTML\, CSS\, TEI-XML XPath\, XSLT\, and eXist-db)\, our programme includes the more general practical guidelines on how to make a digital edition. \nRegistration information:\n\nEarly bird registration deadline: 16 March 2019.\nRegular registration deadline: 6 April 2019.\n\nFor more information\, including a preliminary programme\, please visit the Summer School’s website.
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/antwerp-dh-summer-school-2020-making-a-digital-edition-basic-skills-and-technologies/
LOCATION:UAntwerp City Campus\, Prinsstraat 13\, Antwerp\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,ASU in DH,CLARIAH-VL,CMG,DHuF,Summer Schools,Training
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/07-ASU_20-KRT-DigitalHumanities.png
ORGANIZER;CN="platformDH":MAILTO:platformdh@uantwerpen.be
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170213T093000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170214T140000
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20170410T114409Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191009T134007Z
UID:496-1486978200-1487080800@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:Beckett Digital Manuscript Project Training Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Monday 13 February\n\n\n\nTime\nEvent\n\n\n\n09:30 – 10:00\nWelcome and coffee\n\n\n10:00 – 12:45\nIntroductory session for editors and students:\nBDMP State of the Art: presentation of new and upcoming modules \nIntroduction – Dirk Van Hulle\nMolloy and Malone Dies – Dirk Van Hulle\, Vincent Neyt and Pim Verhulst\nWatt – Mark Byron\nShort Prose – Mark Nixon\nHow It Is – Anthony Cordingley\nCompany – Georgina Nugent-Folan\nWaiting for Godot – Mark Nixon and Dirk Van Hulle\nEndgame – Shane Weller and Dirk Van Hulle\nRadio Plays – Pim Verhulst\nPlay – Olga Beloborodova\nFilm – Paul Ardoin\nLate Plays – Peter Fifield\n\n\n12:45 – 14:00\nLunch\n\n\n14:00 – 14:30\nProject management and workflow (Vincent Neyt and Dirk Van Hulle)\n\n\n14:30 – 15:00\nRound-table discussion: Citation of BDMP modules\, delivery schedules\, etc.\n\n\n15:00 – 15:30\nCoffee Break\n\n\n15:30 – 17:30\nWorkshop image/text view (Vincent Neyt)\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTuesday 14 February\n\n\n\nTime\nEvent\n\n\n\n09:30 – 10:00\nCoffee\n\n\n10:00 – 11:35\nProblems and solutions (Vincent Neyt).\nExample-based discussion of specific problems relating to encoding texts (crosswords\, gaps\, doodles\, diagrams in stage directions\, etc.)\n\n\n11:30 – 12:00\nCoffee Break\n\n\n12:00 – 12:20\nOutreach and dissemination (Elli Bleeker and Aodhán Kelly)\n\n\n12:20 – 13:00\nRound-table discussion\n\n\n13:00 – 14:00\nLunch\n\n\n\n\n\nA Workshop on Digital Scholarly Editing\, sponsored by the European Research Council (ERC)\, the Digital Scholarly Editions Initial Training Network DiXiT (Marie Curie ITN) and the University of Antwerp; organised by the Centre for Manuscript Genetics. \n     \n\nparticipants: 16
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/beckett-digital-manuscript-project-training-workshop/
LOCATION:S.D.014\, Prinsstraat 13\, Antwerpen\, Antwerpen\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,BDMP,CMG,DHuF,Training,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Screen-Shot-2017-04-10-at-15.54.48.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20161005T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20161007T170000
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20170410T125912Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191009T134232Z
UID:522-1475663400-1475859600@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:DiXiT 3 / ESTS 2016
DESCRIPTION:Digital Scholarly Editing: Theory\, Practice\, Methods\n  \nThis thirteenth annual conference of the European Society for Textual Scholarship (ESTS)\, is organized in conjunction with the Digital Scholarly Editing Initial Training Network (DiXiT) and hosted by the Centre for Manuscript Genetics at the University of Antwerp\, Belgium. \n5-7 October 2016 \nKeynote speakers: \nKathryn Sutherland and Paul Eggert \nGuests of honour: \nHans Walter Gabler and Peter Shillingsburg \nAs digital publications are reaching a stage of maturity and scholarly editors are becoming increasingly aware of the seemingly endless possibilities of hybrid or fully Digital Scholarly Editions\, the impact of the digital medium on the field of Textual Criticism has become undeniable. As a result of this ‘digital turn’\, textual scholars are now faced with new challenges and opportunities that have called for a re-evaluation of the field’s established theoretical and practical framework. For the thirteenth annual conference of the European Society for Textual Scholarship (ESTS)\, organized in association with the Digital Scholarly Editing Initial Training Network ‘DiXiT’\, we intend to face this new direction in textual scholarship head-on\, by focussing on the recent developments in textual scholarship that are instigated by this reassessment of the theories\, practices\, and methods of scholarly editing in general\, and of the Digital Scholarly Edition (DSE) in particular.
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/dixit-3-ests-2016/
LOCATION:Hof van Liere\, Prinsstraat 13\, Antwerpen\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,CMG,Conferences
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20161004T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20161004T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20170410T133811Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191009T134327Z
UID:531-1475578800-1475598600@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:Digital Scholarly Editing and Textual Criticism
DESCRIPTION:Pre-conference workshop of the DiXiT 3 / ESTS 2016 conference\, organised by DiXiT\, hosted by the Centre for Manuscript Genetics at the University of Antwerp. \nAbstract\nThe production of digital critical editions is a crucial issue for anyone working on texts written in pre-modern times\, philologists\, historians\, philosophers etc. Yet\, there are many different practices\, and concepts behind the digital representation of a critical apparatus are difficult to grasp. Besides\, there are still very little tools supporting the creation and processing of digital critical editions. \nThe workshop includes talks and presentations by philologists and DH specialists introducing and discussing the very nature of critical editions as well as the digital representation of a critical apparatus. Furthermore\, the state-of-the-art in terms of automatic collation tools and methods for processing and publishing digital critical editions will be assessed. \nSCHEDULE/PROGRAMME\n11.00 Welcome coffee\, Opening \n11.15-11.45 Caroline Macé – Jost Gippert: What type of (digital) scholarly edition for what type of textual tradition?\n11.45-12.15 Armin Hoenen: Digital Stemmatological tools\n12.15-12:35 Catherine Smith: Introducing the collation editor\n12.35-13.15 Klaus Wachtel\, Marcello Perathoner: Towards a global stemma of the Greek New Testament textual tradition: Methodological approach\, technological issues and solutions \n13.15 Lunch \n14.15-14.45 Gioele Barabucci\, Franz Fischer: CollateX and the formalization of textual Criticism – Bridging the gap between automated collation and edited critical texts\n14.45-15.15 Marjorie Burghart\, The TEI Critical Apparatus Toolbox: User-Empowerment with the TEI\n15.15-15.45 Roberto Rosselli del Turco\, tba \n15:45-16:00 Coffee break \n16.00-16.30 Discussion
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/digital-scholarly-editing-and-textual-criticism/
LOCATION:Hof van Liere\, Prinsstraat 13\, Antwerpen\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,CMG,Training,Workshops
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20161004T093000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20161004T130000
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20170410T134419Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191009T134406Z
UID:535-1475573400-1475586000@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:Complexities of Project Logistics
DESCRIPTION:Pre-conference workshop of the DiXiT 3 / ESTS 2016 conference\, organised by DiXiT\, hosted by the Centre for Manuscript Genetics at the University of Antwerp. \nABSTRACT\nTypically\, editorial projects – digital or non-digital – get funding for a limited time span\, and that time span is usually not sufficient to edit and publish the source or body of sources that the project set out to publish. Often\, more funding will be sought\, but\, as technology and time have moved on\, and as one can’t reasonably just repeat the first grant application\, the focus of a follow-up project will be slightly different. In a third step\, one may ask for a neighbouring source collection to be included in the project\, or a new tool added to the collection\, dependent on what funders at that moment in time seem willing to support. \nProjects may end up with multiple collections and datasets\, digitized according to multiple standards using multiple (sometimes obsolete) technologies. Some may have started out on paper\, and have ridden the waves of databases\, HTML\, CD-ROM\, XML\, mass digitisation approaches and Linked open data. Even projects that have consistently worked within a TEI framework may have had to ingest documents that use different TEI dialects. These technological complexities may be increased by constraints in overall planning and everyday workflow\, including time and budget management\, especially if there are cross-institutional collaborations\, interdependencies on deliverables\, strict deadlines\, staff mobility etc. The workshop will discuss these and other complexities of project logistics. \nSPEAKERS\n\nPeter Boot (Huygens ING): workshop organiser\nThomas Stäcker (Herzog August Bibliothek): Fighting the Digital Quicksand – The Role of Research Libraries in Building up Reliable and Sustainable Infrastructures for Digital Editions.\nRik Hoekstra (Huygens ING): Changing editing policies of the States General of the United Dutch Provinces (1576-1796).\nJan Burgers (Huygens ING): Editing medieval charters in the digital age.\nMartine de Bruin (Meertens Institute): tba.\nAnna-Maria Sichani (Huygens ING) and James Smithies (Kings Digital Lab): Designing a Sustainable Future: An approach to the Assessment\, Archiving and Preservation of Digital Projects.
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/complexities-of-project-logistics/
LOCATION:Hof van Liere\, Prinsstraat 13\, Antwerpen\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,CMG,Training,Workshops
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20161004T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20161004T193000
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20170410T134738Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191009T134449Z
UID:537-1475568000-1475609400@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:The Born Digital Record of the Writing Process: Discussing Concepts of Representation for the Digital Scholarly Edition
DESCRIPTION:Pre-conference workshop of the DiXiT 3 / ESTS 2016 conference\, taught by Thorsten Ries (UGent)\, hosted by the Centre for Manuscript Genetics at the University of Antwerp. \nABSTRACT\nIn its first part\, the workshop gives a hands-on introduction to digital forensic analysis of hard drives for born digital traces of the writing process with different constructed case scenarios. The hands-on experience serves as a foundation for a moderated group discussion about how the specific materiality of the digital historical record can be read in philological terms of the critique génétique\, how this changes our ideas about text production and consequently the requirements and understanding of representation of the genetic digital born record in a documentary / genetic DSE. \nThe hands-on workshop will introduce participating archivists\, philologists and researchers from the humanities into forensic imaging of hard drives\, inspection and analysis of forensic images. Two phases of analysis of the process will be covered during the workshop: a) forensic imaging\, triage and preservation of hard drives in the archive and b) philological recovery of textual versions of a writing process from a digital forensic image (mounting\, inspection of temporary files\, undelete\, file carving\, drive slack analysis\, timeline analysis\, grep) and by low-level inspection of files (fast save artifacts\, RSID-tags). Depending on participants’ interest other scenarios\, e.g. cloud services\, can also be addressed. To avoid legal issues\, participants will work with forensic images created for this workshop’s training purposes with Christian Moch’s Forensig forensic image generator (Moch 2009\, Moch Freiling 2009). \nLEVEL\nThe workshop aims at an audience with average user skills\, e.g. archivists with no or little prior knowledge of forensic computing. \nPRACTICAL\nThe participants are required to bring their own laptop\, with forensic software installed before the start of the workshop. More information on how to install which software will be provided to registered participants.
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/the-born-digital-record-of-the-writing-process-discussing-concepts-of-representation-for-the-digital-scholarly-edition/
LOCATION:Hof van Liere\, Prinsstraat 13\, Antwerpen\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:CMG,Training,Workshops
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20150608T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20150609T170000
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20170410T125245Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191009T132532Z
UID:517-1433750400-1433869200@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:DH Benelux 2015
DESCRIPTION:The DHBenelux 2015 conference will be proudly hosted by the University of Antwerp. The conference will take place on Monday 8 and Tuesday 9 June 2015 at the University of Antwerp campus. \nThe DHBenelux conference welcomes contributions and participants from all areas of research and teaching in Digital Humanities. While the conference has a focus on recent advances in Belgium\, The Netherlands\, and Luxembourg\, we do warmly welcome contributions from outside the Benelux. The language of the conference is international English. We hope that we may welcome many scholars to the European scientific meeting platform that DHBenelux will constitute in summer 2015 for the Digital Humanities. \nThe conference program will offer oral presentations\, project presentations\, poster sessions\, and a demo space. The conference’s two keynote speakers will be William Noel\, Director of The Kislak Center for Special Collections\, Rare Books and Manuscripts at the University of Pennsylvania; and Elena Pierazzo\, Professor of Italian Studies and Digital Humanities at Stendhal University\, Grenoble III\, whose monograph on Digital Scholarly Editing will be published in August this year.
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/dh-benelux-2015/
LOCATION:Hof van Liere\, Prinsstraat 13\, Antwerpen\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,CLARIAH-VL,CLiPS,CMG,Conferences,DHuF,Networking
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/dhbenelux-1.png
ORGANIZER;CN="platformDH":MAILTO:platformdh@uantwerpen.be
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20140908T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20140908T170000
DTSTAMP:20260430T175332
CREATED:20170410T112032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191009T134716Z
UID:476-1410170400-1410195600@platformdh.uantwerpen.be
SUMMARY:Beckett Digital Manuscript Project Workshop
DESCRIPTION:Monday 8 September\n\n\n\nTime\nEvent\n\n\n\n10:00\nWelcome and coffee\n\n\n10:15\nDirk Van Hulle and Vincent Neyt: The BDMP and the ERC project ‘Creative Undoing and Textual Scholarship’\n\n\n10:45\nRonald Dekker: Version Comparison with CollateX\n\n\n11:15\nDiscussion: Collatex in the BDMP\n\n\n\nLunch Break\n\n\n13:30\nManuscript Transcription and Encoding Challenges: Presentations and Discussion. Mark Byron: Watt; Pim Verhulst: Beckett’s Radio Plays; Anthony Cordingley: Comment C’est / How It Is.\n\n\n15:30\nCoffee Break\n\n\n16:00\nManuscript Transcription and Encoding Challenges: Presentations and Discussion. Peter Fifield: Beckett’s Late Plays; Mark Nixon\, Stephen Stacey: Beckett’s Shorter Prose; Georgina Nugent-Folan: Company / Compagnie.\n\n\n17:00\nConclusion\n\n\n\n\n\nA Workshop on Digital Scholarly Editing\, sponsored by the European Research Council (ERC)\, the Digital Scholarly Editions Initial Training Network DiXiT (Marie Curie ITN) and the University of Antwerp; organised by the Centre for Manuscript Genetics.
URL:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/index.php/event/beckett-digital-manuscript-project-workshop/
LOCATION:S.D.014\, Prinsstraat 13\, Antwerpen\, Antwerpen\, 2000\, Belgium
CATEGORIES:ACDC,BDMP,CMG,DHuF,Training,Workshops
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://platformdh.uantwerpen.be/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Screen-Shot-2017-04-10-at-15.54.48.png
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR