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Meeting the Medieval in a Digital World
Edited by Matthew Evan Davis, Tamsyn Mahoney-Steel and Ece Turnator
Series: Medieval Media and Culture
262 Pages, Trim size: 156 x 234 mm
- Hardcover
- 9781641891929
- Published: October 2018
Introduction, by Matthew Evan Davis, Tamsyn Mahoney-Steel, and Ece Turnator
Statistical Analysis and the Boundaries of the Genre of Old English Prayer, by William H. Smith and Charles L. Butler
if ( not "Quantize, Click, and Conclude" ) {Digital Methods In Medieval Studies}, by Katayoun Torabi
Project Paradise: A Geo-Temporal Exhibit of the Hereford Map and The Book of John Mandeville, by Alexandra Bolintineau
Ghastly Vignettes: Pierce the Ploughman’s Crede, the Ghost of Shakespeare’s Blackfriars, and the Future of the Digital Past, by James Knowles
Content is not Context: Radical Transparency and the Acknowledgement of Informational Palimpsests in Online Display, by Matthew Evan Davis
Encoding and Decoding Machaut, by Tamsyn Mahoney-Steel
Of Dinosaurs and Dwarves: Moving on from mouvance in Digital Editions, by Timothy L. Stinson
Adam Scriveyn in Cyberspace: Loss, Labour, Ideology, and Infrastructure in Interoperable Reuse of Digital Manuscript Metadata, by Bridget Whearty
Digital Representations of the Provenance of Medieval Manuscripts, by Toby Burrows
Bridging the Gap: Managing a Digital Medieval Initiative Across Disciplines and Institutions, by Joseph Koivisto, Lilla Kopár, and Nancy L. Wicker
Matthew Evan Davis currently serves as a postdoctoral fellow with the Sherman Centre for Digital Scholarship at McMaster University. His digital research focuses on the “thingness” of digital presentation and the ways that digital tools and methods serve as shadow theories. His medieval scholarship focuses on fifteenth and early-sixteenth century medieval drama, hagiography, and cultural transmission through translation and reception.
Tamsyn Mahoney-Steel is the Digital Scholarship Specialist for the Sheridan Libraries at Johns Hopkins University. She also teaches courses on the digital humanities for the Johns Hopkins Advanced Academic Programs.
Ece Turnator, a PhD in Byzantine studies, worked on multiple digital projects and taught in the recent past. She is currently the Humanities and Digital Scholarship Librarian at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.