Research and Development in the Digital Humanities, a working List



Download 6.1 Kb.
Date07.08.2017
Size6.1 Kb.
#28497

Research and Development in the Digital Humanities, A Working List



ACH: Association for Computers and the Humanities
The Association for Computers and the Humanities is an international professional organization. Since its establishment, it has been the major professional society for people working in computer-aided research in literature and language studies, history, philosophy, and other humanities disciplines, and especially research involving the manipulation and analysis of textual materials.

The ACH is devoted to disseminating information among its members about work in the field of humanities computing, as well as encouraging the development and dissemination of significant textual and linguistic resources and software for scholarly research.


ALLC: Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing


The Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing was founded in 1973 with the purpose of supporting the application of computing in the study of language and literature. As the range of available and relevant computing techniques in the humanities has increased, the interests of the Association's members have necessarily broadened, to encompass not only text analysis and language corpora, but also image processing and electronic editions. The ALLC's membership is international, is drawn from across the humanities disciplines, and includes students and established scholars alike.

Alan Liu: Digital Humanities


Projects in Digital Humanities including links to VoS (Voice of the Shuttle)
IATH: Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities
IATH is a research unit of the University of Virginia. Our goal is to explore and develop information technology as a tool for scholarly humanities research.

Introduction to TEI by Laura Mandell

NINES: Networked Interface for Nineteenth-Century Electronic Scholarship


    • Nineteenth-Century Scholarship: Over the past ten years a growing body of digital scholarly work has been undertaken, much of it put online, nearly all of it executed without peer review processes, none of it integrated (except by hyperlinking). NINES is a project to found a publishing environment for integrated, peer-reviewed online scholarship centered in nineteenth-century studies, British and American.

    • Scholarly Collective:
      NINES believes it is clearly in the interest of scholars to coordinate our work. We know that the migration of scholarship from paper-based to digital platforms and networks, already underway, will only grow apace. Scholars and educators must act on our own behalf if we are to help shape the form and result of this migration. To that end, NINES is promoting the means and a way for excellent work in digital scholarship to be produced, vetted, (eventually) published, and recognized by the discipline.


TEI: Text Encoding Initiative


The Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) Guidelines are an international and interdisciplinary standard that facilitates libraries, museums, publishers, and individual scholars represent a variety of literary and linguistic texts for online research, teaching, and preservation.
Download 6.1 Kb.

Share with your friends:




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page