Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 19, No. 699.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/
www.princeton.edu/humanist/
Submit to: humanist_at_princeton.edu
[1] From: Arianna Ciula <arianna.ciula_at_KCL.AC.UK> (32)
Subject: CLiP 2006 EARLY REGISTRATION OPEN
[2] From: news_at_lists.ulrls.lon.ac.uk (13)
Subject: Electronic resources for manuscript studies
[3] From: "Ray Siemens" <siemensr_at_MALA.BC.CA> (23)
Subject: Renaissance Studies and New Technologies (RSA, 22-24
March 2007)
--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 07 Apr 2006 06:58:35 +0100
From: Arianna Ciula <arianna.ciula_at_KCL.AC.UK>
Subject: CLiP 2006 EARLY REGISTRATION OPEN
* Apologies for cross-posting *
===========================================================
CLiP 2006 NOW OPEN FOR EARLY REGISTRATION
The 7th Computers, Literature and Philology (CLiP) conference:
'Literatures, Languages and Cultural Heritage in a digital world'
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London, UK
Thursday 29 June - Saturday 1 July 2006
<http://www.cch.kcl.ac.uk/clip2006/>http://www.cch.kcl.ac.uk/clip2006/
===========================================================
ABOUT CLiP
The international Computers, Literature and Philology (CLiP)
conference has taken place at a variety of European universities
since the first conference in 1998. The initiative for the first
seminar was taken by literary scholars who were not only aware of the
importance of new technologies for the humanities, but also of what
the humanities had contributed to the creation of digital culture in
general and to the content of the Internet in particular. This year
the host organization will be the Centre for Computing in the
Humanities (CCH), King's College London, UK.
The international Computers, Literature and Philology (CLiP)
conference focuses on the integration of Philology and Information
Technology relevant to humanities computing communities involved in
the study of Romance languages. The academic issues and projects are
approached from a multicultural European perspective, so as to foment
international collaboration in research and teaching.
This conference can best be seen as a three-day seminar, in that
there are no parallel sessions, there is as coherent an academic
focus as possible and the participation of young scholars is actively
encouraged.
EARLY REGISTRATION DEADLINE
Early registration with reduced fees is open until May 29, 2006.
More details and registration form at:
<http://www.cch.kcl.ac.uk/clip2006/content/registration/registration.html>http://www.cch.kcl.ac.uk/clip2006/content/registration/registration.html
--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 08 Apr 2006 08:27:22 +0100
From: news_at_lists.ulrls.lon.ac.uk
Subject: Electronic resources for manuscript studies
Thinking about a dissertation on manuscripts or palaeography? Are you a
medievalist interested to see what manuscripts might mean for your work?
You are invited to an introductory session on electronic resources for
manuscript studies.
11.30am-12.30pm Tuesday 25th April (and repeated at the same time on
Wednesday 26th April) in the Seminar Room behind the Palaeography Room
Please sign up at the desk in the Palaeography Room."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Alun Ford
Manuscript Studies Librarian
Senate House Library, University of London Senate House Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU
(p) +44 20 7862 8475
(f) +44 20 7862 8480
--[3]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 08 Apr 2006 08:28:04 +0100
From: "Ray Siemens" <siemensr_at_MALA.BC.CA>
Subject: Renaissance Studies and New Technologies (RSA,
22-24 March 2007)
CFP: Renaissance Studies and New Technologies
Renaissance Society of America Annual Conference
Miami, 22-24 March 2007
For the past six years, the RSA program has featured a number of
sessions that document innovative ways in which computing technology is
being incorporated into the scholarly activity of our community. At the
2007 RSA meeting (Miami, 22-24 March 2007), several sessions will
continue to follow this interest across several key projects, through a
number of thematic touchstones, and in several emerging areas.
For these sessions, we seek proposals in the following general areas,
and beyond:
a) new technology and research (individual or group projects)
b) new technology and teaching (individual or group projects)
c) new technology and publication (e.g. from the vantage point
of authors, traditional and non-traditional publishers)
Proposals for papers, panels, deminstrations, and/or workshop
presentations that focus on these issues and others are welcome.
Please send proposals before May 15 to siemens_at_uvic.ca.
Ray Siemens
English, CRC Humanities Computing, University of Victoria
and
William R. Bowen
Chair, Department of Humanities, University of Toronto,
Scarborough
Received on Sat Apr 08 2006 - 03:44:14 EDT
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Sat Apr 08 2006 - 03:44:21 EDT