Die 9th European Summer University in Digital Humanities „Culture & Technology“ fand vom 17.–27.07.2018 in Leipzig statt.
Workshops
- Alex Bia (Universidad Miguel Hernández, Elche, Spain): XML-TEI document encoding, structuring, rendering and transformation (2 weeks)
- Carol Chiodo
(Princeton University, USA) / Lauren Tilton (University of Richmond,
USA): Hands on Humanities Data Workshop – Creation, Discovery and
Analysis (2 weeks) - Nils Reiter / Sarah Schulz (Universität Stuttgart, Germany): Reflected Text Analysis in the Digital Humanities (2nd week)
- David Joseph Wrisley (New York University Abu Dhabi, UAE) / Randa El Khatib (University of Victoria, Canada): Humanities Data and Mapping Environments (2 weeks)
- Maciej Eder (Polish
Academy of Sciences / Pedagogical University, Cracow, Poland) / Jeremi
Ochab (Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland): Stylometry (2 weeks) - Christoph Draxler (Universität München, Germany) / Thorsten Trippel
(Eberhard-Karls Universität Tübingen, Germany): Asking questions to
data in the humanities: right, correct, efficient (Introducing and
comparing XQuery, SQL, SPARQL for data from the humanities) (2 weeks) - Peter Bell (Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany) / Leonardo Impett
(École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland): Computer
Vision Intervention. How digital methods help to visually understand
corpora of art and cultural heritage (1st week) - Nicola Carboni (Harvard Institut „Villa I Tatti“, Firenze, Italy) / Leo Zorc
(Universität Zürich / ETH Zürich, Switzerland): Integrating Human
Science Data using CIDOC-CRM as Formal Ontology: a practical approach
(2nd week) - Tommi A. Pirinen (Universität Hamburg, Germany): The humanities scholar’s perspective on rule based machine translation (2 weeks)
- Eun Seo Jo (Stanford University, USA): Word Vectors and Corpus Text Mining with Python (2 weeks)
- Lynne Siemens (University of Victoria, Canada): Introduction to Project Management (2nd week)
Lectures
17.07.2018 16:15 – 17:45 Katy Börner (Indiana University, USA): Actionable Data Visualizations
18.07.2018 16:15 – 17:45 Manuel Burghardt (University of Leipzig, Germany): Computational Musicology – Distant Reading of Sheet Music
20.07.2018 16:15 – 17:45 María Gimena del Rio Riande (IIBICRIT, CONICET Buenos Aires, Argentina): Neither so global, nor so local. Digital Humanities and Humanidades Digitales
23.07.2018 16:15 – 17:45 Ray Siemens (University of Victoria, Canada): Open Social Scholarship, In Real Terms
24.07.2018 16:15 – 17:45 Marco Passarotti
(Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Mailand, Italien): From father
Busa to Linked Data. What does Thomas Aquinas have to do with the
Semantic Web
27.07.2018 16:15 – 17:45 Nancy Ide (Vassar College,
USA): The TEI, Its Foundations and Impact, and How It Fits Into Today’s
Needs and Practices for Language Analysis
Project presentations
Wednesday 18.07.2018 14:15 – 15:45 Modelling, cataloging, analysing cultural heritage
- Massoomeh Niknia (Kharazmi University,
Theheran, Iran): „Migrating information from Iranian excavation reports:
comparing semantic mark-up to information extraction“ - Giuditta Cirnigliaro
(Rutgers University, USA): „The Digital Annotation of Leonardo’s
Library Items: A Practice-Led Diagrammatic Model for Developing Omeka
Exhibits“ - Simon Gabay (UniNe, Neuchâtel, Switzerland): „A catalogue of 17th c. French autograph manuscripts“
Friday 20.07.2018 14:15 – 15:45 Revealing, examining, and critical understanding in the digital age
- Rasa Kasperienė (Vytautas Magnus University,
Kaunas, Lithuania): „Application of Social Network & Content
Analysis Methods for Facebook Groups Dynamics“ - Jeffrey Allan Kelly Lowenstein (Grand Valley State University, USA): „Gaming the Lottery: Anatomy of a Global Investigation“
- Erik Radisch, Gernot Howanitz, Bernhard Bermeitinger (University of Passau, Germany): „Contextualizing Bandera: A Distant Watching Approach“
Sächsische Akademie der Wissenschaften
Monday 23.07.2018 14:15 – 15:45 Space, time and beyond
- Victor Westrich (Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany): „A spatial approach to the digital visualization of medieval sources“
- Giovanni Pietro Vitali (Université de Poitiers, France): „Rethinking Rome as an Anthology: The Poeti der Trullo’s Street Poetry“
- Stefan Jänicke (Universität Leipzig, Germany): „The Value of Infographics for Timeline Visualizations“
Tuesday 24.07.2018 14:15 – 15:45 Corpora, Corpus Analysis, Resources and Tools
- Yu-Hua Chen (University of Nottingham Ningbo
China, China): „Beyond Borders, Beyond Words: Issues & Challenges in
Developing An Open-Access Multimodal Corpus of L2 Academic English from
An EMI University in China“ - Theodora Konach
(Jagiellonian University,Krakow, Poland): „Towards an Ethical Framework
for the Digitalisation of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Museums –
Digital Humanities in the Comparative Intellectual Property Law“ - Marco Passarotti
(Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milan, Italy): „What’s Going On
in Milan? A Practical Introduction to Resources and Tools for Latin at
the CIRCSE Research Centre“
Poster session
- Juliette Marion Reboul (Radboud Universiteit
Nijmegen, the Netherlands): „Capturing cultures of reading: Database
design for facile & realtime connections“ - Megan Cytron (Universidad Complutense, Spain): „Neither Here nor There: Building a Geocritical Cartography of Madrid’s Literary „Edgelands“
- Jan Škvrňák
(Masaryk University, Czech Republic): „Divide et impera: Social Network
Analysis of Bohemian Civil War 1248-1249 and its Aftermath“ - Laura Ivaska (University of Turku, Finland): „Undercovering the true source text(s) of translations“
- Madlaina Brugger (University of Zurich, Switzerland): „The ‘Libro de Apolonio’. A Digital Critical Edition“
- Mariam Matiashvili (Iv. Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, Georgia): „Mention analysis By Pulsar AI“
