'Beyond the Facsimile: Rich Models of Late Medieval and Early Modern Texts'
A Digital Humanities Day on Monday 13 December 2010 atSheffield Hallam University
This one-day event is open to all interested parties and there is no conference fee, but it would be much appreciated if anyone intending to come would let Gabriel Egan <mail@gabrielegan.com> know in advance for catering and room booking purposes. Lunch and coffess will be provided free for all speakers and all non-speaking attendees who contact Gabriel Egan in advance.
Programme
(Speakers please note that paper slots are 30 minutes, including questions)
9.30-10am Coffee on arrival
10-10.15am Gabriel Egan (Loughborough University) "Welcome and Aims of the Meeting"
10.15-10.45am Takako Kato (Leicester University) "The Virtues and Challenges of XML: Making a Digital Edition of Malory's Morte Darthur"
10.45-11.15am Paul Vetch (King's College London) "A Map for All Seasons: Experimenting with the Gough Map"
11.15-11.30am Coffee
11.30am-12noon James Cummings (University of Oxford) "Interrogating and Accessing Digital Scholarly Editions"-
12noon-12.30pm
John Bradley and Stephen Pigney (King's College London) "Images and Text: Towards an Understanding of the Early Modern Illustrated Book"
John Bradley and Stephen Pigney (King's College London) "Images and Text: Towards an Understanding of the Early Modern Illustrated Book"
12.30-1.15pm Lunch
1.15-1.45pm Ari Friedlander (University of Michigan) "Are We Being Digital Yet?"
1.45-2.15pm Shawn Martin (University of Pennsylvania) "Images, Texts, and Records: Tools for Teaching in a Confusing Landscape"
2.15-2.30pm Coffee
2.30-3pm Eugene Giddens (Anglia Ruskin University) "The Death of Digital Editions"
3-3.20pm Ray Siemens (University of Victoria) "Beyond the Facsimile"
3.30-4pm Round Table involving all speakers
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