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The Digital Classicist 2013

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This wide-ranging volume is a collection of papers that initially emanated from presentations at Digital Classicist seminars and conference panels and showcases exemplary applications of digital sc...
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  • 09 December 2013
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This edited volume collects together peer-reviewed papers that initially emanated from presentations at Digital Classicist seminars and conference panels.

This wide-ranging volume showcases exemplary applications of digital scholarship to the ancient world and critically examines the many challenges and opportunities afforded by such research. The chapters included here demonstrate innovative approaches that drive forward the research interests of both humanists and technologists while showing that rigorous scholarship is as central to digital research as it is to mainstream classical studies.

As with the earlier Digital Classicist publications, our aim is not to give a broad overview of the field of digital classics; rather, we present here a snapshot of some of the varied research of our members in order to engage with and contribute to the development of scholarship both in the fields of classical antiquity and Digital Humanities more broadly.

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Price: £59.99
Publisher: University of London
Imprint: University of London Press
Series: Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplements
Publication Date: 09 December 2013
Trim Size: 9.62 X 6.69 in
ISBN: 9781905670499
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Library & Information Science / Digital & Online Resources, Ancient history, Graphical and digital media applications

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Introduction

Modelling
Andrew Bevan: Travel and interaction in the Greek and Roman world. A review of some computational modelling approaches

Vince Gaffney, Phil Murgatroyd, Bart Craenen, and Georgios Theodoropoulos: ‘Only individuals’: moving the Byzantine army to Manzikert

Texts
Elton Barker, Leif Isaksen, Nick Rabinowitz, Stefan Bouzarovski, and Chris Pelling: On using digital resources for the study of an ancient text: the case of Herodotus’ Histories

Marco Büchler, Annette Geßner, Monica Berti, and Thomas Eckart: Measuring the influence of a work by text re-use

Tobias Blanke, Mark Hedges, and Shrija Rajbhandari Towards a virtual data centre for Classics

Ryan Baumann: The Son of Suda On-line

Infrastructure
Elaine Matthews and Sebastian Rahtz: The Lexicon of Greek Personal Names and classical web services

Simon Mahony: HumSlides on Flickr: using an online community platform to host and enhance an image collection

Valentina Asciutti and Stuart Dunn: Connecting the Classics: a case study of Collective Intelligence in Classical Studies