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"HUMANIST: Lessons from a Global Electronic Seminar", Computers and the Humanities 26 (1992): 205-222<br /> | "HUMANIST: Lessons from a Global Electronic Seminar", Computers and the Humanities 26 (1992): 205-222<br /> |
Revision as of 12:48, 6 April 2009
Contents
- 1 Papers and Essays
- 1.1 As We May Think, 1945
- 1.2 The Rationale of HyperText, 1995
- 1.3 Radiant Textuality, 1996
- 1.4 A Hypertextual History of Humanities Computing, 1996
- 1.5 What is humanities computing? Towards a Definition of the Field, 1998
- 1.6 Is humanities computing an academic discipline?, 1999
- 1.7 Computing, Humanism, and the Coming Age of Print, 1999
- 1.8 Historique de l'analyse de texte informatisée
- 1.9 Humanities computing, 2002
- 1.10 What is Humanities Computing and what it is not, 2002
- 1.11 Is Humanities Computing a Discipline?, 2002
- 2 Papers by Canadian Scholars
- 3 Computing in the Humanities Working Papers
- 4 Books
- 4.1 A Companion to Digital Humanities
- 4.2 Mind technologies; humanities computing and the Canadian academic community
- 4.3 Humanities Computing
- 4.4 Electronic Texts in the Humanities: Principles and Practice
- 4.5 The Humanities Computing Year Book
- 4.6 Using Tact With Electronic Texts: A Guide to Text-Analysis Computing Tools : Version 2.1 for MS-DOS and PC DOS
- 4.7 The Digital Word: Text-Based Computing in the Humanities
- 4.8 Research in Humanities Computing 2: Selected Papers from the ALLC/ACH Conference, Siegen, June 1990
- 4.9 Research in Humanities Computing 1: Selected Papers From the 1989 Allc-Ach Conference, Toronto, June 1989
- 4.10 Tools for Humanists,1989
- 4.11 A Guide to Computer Applications in the Humanities
- 4.12 Computing in the Humanities
- 4.13 Manual for the printing of literary texts and concordances by computer
- 5 History of Digital Humanities in Canada
- 5.1 Canadian Historical highlights by Geoffrey Rockwell
- 5.2 University of Waterloo Centre for the New OED and Text Research
- 5.3 Centre for Computing in the Humanities at the University of Toronto (CCH)
- 5.4 Text Encoding Initiative (TEI)
- 5.5 ALLC/ICCH conferences
- 5.6 Lexicons of Early Modern English (LEME)
- 5.7 The Orlando Project
- 5.8 Internet Shakespeare Editions
- 5.9 Electronic Text Centre
- 5.10 COCH-COSH
- 5.11 Multimedia at McMaster
- 5.12 The Humanities Computing Curriculum Conference 2001
- 5.13 Humanities Computing at University of Alberta
Papers and Essays
As We May Think, 1945
Vannevar Bush
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/view/Essays/VannevarBushAsWeMayThink
The Rationale of HyperText, 1995
Jerome McGann
http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/public/jjm2f/rationale.html
Radiant Textuality, 1996
Jerome McGann
http://www.iath.virginia.edu/public/jjm2f/radiant.html
A Hypertextual History of Humanities Computing, 1996
Michael Fraser
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~ctitext2/history/
What is humanities computing? Towards a Definition of the Field, 1998
Willard McCarty
http://staff.cch.kcl.ac.uk/~wmccarty/essays/McCarty,%20What%20is%20humanities%20computing.pdf
Is humanities computing an academic discipline?, 1999
Geoffrey Rockwell
http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/hcs/rockwell.html
Computing, Humanism, and the Coming Age of Print, 1999
Stuart Moulthrop
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/view/Essays/StuartMoulthropComputingHumanismPrint
Historique de l'analyse de texte informatisée
de Stéfan Sinclair
http://www.uottawa.ca/academic/arts/astrolabe/articles/art0020.htm
Humanities computing, 2002
Willard McCarty
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/view/Essays/WillardMcCartyHumanitiesComputing
What is Humanities Computing and what it is not, 2002
John Unsworth
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/view/Essays/JohnUnsworthHumanitiesComputing
Is Humanities Computing a Discipline?, 2002
Tito Orlandi
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/view/Essays/TitiOrlandiHumanitiesComputingDiscipline
Papers by Canadian Scholars
Computing in the Humanities Working Papers
CH Working Papers (or Computing in the Humanities Working Papers) are an interdisciplinary series of refereed publications on computer-assisted research. They are a vehicle for an intermediary stage at which questions of computer methodology in relation to the corpus at hand are of interest to the scholar before the computer disappears into the background. Many of the papers from the following collections offer an academic view of the history of Humanities Computing.
Scholarly Discourse and Computing Technology: Perspectives on Pedagogy, Research, and Dissemination in the Humanities, 1997
R.G. Siemens and William Winder, eds
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/sd_intro.htm
Introduction: Technologising the Humanities / Humanitising the Technologies, 1998
R.G. Siemens and William Winder, eds
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/th_intro.htm
Scholarly Discourse and Computing Technology II: Perspectives on Pedagogy, Research, and Dissemination in the Humanities, 1999
R.G. Siemens and William Winder, eds
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/sd2_intro.htm
Canadian Humanities Computing 2003: Collaborative Mind Technologies
Barbara Bond and William Winder, eds.
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/CHC2003/
Books
A Companion to Digital Humanities
Published Online: 10 Dec 2007
Editor(s): Susan Schreibman, Ray Siemens, John Unsworth
Print ISBN: 9781405103213 Online ISBN: 9780470999875
DOI: 10.1002/9780470999875
Copyright © 2004 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/companion/
Mind technologies; humanities computing and the Canadian academic community
Ed. by Raymond Siemens and David Moorman.
Publisher: Univ. of Calgary Press 2006
ISBN 1-55238-172-2
http://books.google.ca/books?id=6g8Sf1AqTx4C&pg=PA246&lpg=PA246&dq=humanities+computing+at+the+university+of+alberta&source=bl&ots=cOCAyv_7bA&sig=Z8W_6rTACc6jGi2f_Iz3IE29Kx8&hl=en&ei=PEzaSceQFqLqswPKqqCrCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10
Humanities Computing
Williard McCarty
Publisher: Palgrave; 1st edition edition (Nov 29 2005)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1403935041
ISBN-13: 978-1403935045
Electronic Texts in the Humanities: Principles and Practice
Susan Hockey
Hardcover: 232 pages
Publisher: Oxford University Press (Nov 15) 2000
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0198711948
ISBN-13: 978-0198711940
The Humanities Computing Year Book
Ian Lancashire and Willard McCarty
Hardcover: 408 pages
Publisher: Clarendon Pr (February 1996)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0198244428
ISBN-13: 978-0198244424
Using Tact With Electronic Texts: A Guide to Text-Analysis Computing Tools : Version 2.1 for MS-DOS and PC DOS
by Ian Lancashire, John Bradley, Willard McCarty, Michael Stairs, T. R. Wooldridge
Publisher: Modern Language Association of America (December 1996)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0873525698
http://www.mla.org/store/CID7/PID236
The Digital Word: Text-Based Computing in the Humanities
by George P. Landow (Editor), Paul Delany (Editor)
Hardcover: 374 pages
Publisher: The MIT Press (April 13, 1993)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 026212176X
ISBN-13: 978-0262121767
Research in Humanities Computing 2: Selected Papers from the ALLC/ACH Conference, Siegen, June 1990
by Susan Hockey (Editor), Nancy Ide (Editor)
Hardcover: 272 pages
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (July 7, 1994)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0198240392
ISBN-13: 978-0198240396
Research in Humanities Computing 1: Selected Papers From the 1989 Allc-Ach Conference, Toronto, June 1989
Publisher: Oxford University Press (April 30 1999)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0198242514
ISBN-13: 978-0198242512
Tools for Humanists,1989
Software and Hardware-Fair Guide
Published by CCH
University of Toronto
http://lists.village.virginia.edu/lists_archive/Humanist/v02/0342.html
A Guide to Computer Applications in the Humanities
Susan Hockey
Paperback: 248 pages
Publisher: Johns Hopkins Univ Pr; Reprint edition (March 1983)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0801828910
ISBN-13: 978-0801828911
Computing in the Humanities
Computing in the Humanities: Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Computing in the Humanities
Publisher: University of Waterloo Press 1977 (January 1, 1977)
Editors: Serge Lusignan and John S. North
Language: English
ASIN: B001U9DAUW
Manual for the printing of literary texts and concordances by computer
Robert Jay Glickman
Publisher: University of Toronto Press; Prelim. ed edition (1966)
Language: English
ASIN: B0007ITCRW
History of Digital Humanities in Canada
Canadian Historical highlights by Geoffrey Rockwell
Canada has been an international leader in the area of computing and the humanities. Some historical highlights are:
One of the first, and most important, early centres was the Centre for Computing in the Humanities at the University of Toronto. Set up in 1986 with a grant from IBM under the direction of Ian Lancashire from the department of English, CCH, as it was called, trained a generation of graduate students to experiment with computing in their research. The CCH also took a leadership role in development of the field in Canada and abroad.
Ian Lancashire and Elaine Nardocchio from McMaster formed OCCH (Ontario Consortium for Computing in the Humanities) in 1987)which quickly turned into COCH/COSH (Consortium for Computing in the Humanities) which has recently changed into an Association, SDH/SEMI – a scholarly association that holds an annual conference as part of the Federation Congress.
The premiere discussion list in our field, HUMANIST, was founded at CCH in Toronto by Willard McCarty, then Assistant Director of CCH, in 1987 (?).
In 1989 the CCH ran the first joint international ACH/ALLC conference, The Dynamic Text, and also, one of the most successful ones. Both Ted Nelson and Northrop Frye spoke at The Dynamic Text.
At the Toronto ACH/ALLC in 1989 CCH released TACT (Text Analysis and Concording Tools), a DOS based interactive search and concordance tool that is still one of the best of its kind. Designed by John Bradley, the programming was supported by CCH and Ian Lanshire edited the MLA published Using TACT, still a good introduction to text analysis and available online.
In 1990 CCH started one of the first (non-credit) programs to train graduate students.
In 1991 CCH began publishing the Computing and the Humanities Working Papers, both in print and now online.
In 1991 CCH became a co-sponsor with the Princeton/Rutgers Center for Electronic Texts in the Humanities (CETH) of a Summer Seminar that provided some of the best training internationally in humanities computing.
In 1994 the first faculty position explicitly advertised as a "Humanities Computing" position was hired by McMaster University. Geoffrey Rockwell was hired to direct the (then named) Humanities Computing Centre and Language Labs.
In 1996 McMaster started an undergraduate program in Multimedia that included a strong humanities computing component.
In 2001 the University of Alberta started a two-year MA in Humanities Computing.
In 2001 the University of Victoria ran their first Digital Humanities Summer Institute, a premiere HQP and graduate student training institute that draws participants from all over the world.
In 2003 the Text Analysis Portal for Research was funded by CFI creating humanities computing research infrastructure at 6 universities across Canada.
University of Waterloo Centre for the New OED and Text Research
In January 1985, the University of Waterloo established the Centre for the New OED to fulfill its obligations under an agreement with the Oxford University Press to computerize the OED. The fundamental goal of the Centre remains to support innovative research through the development of application-driven text management software.
http://db.uwaterloo.ca/OED/index.html
Centre for Computing in the Humanities at the University of Toronto (CCH)
- Humanities Computing and Research Innovation
Ian Lancashire (U Toronto)
In this landmark article Ian Lancashire talks about the history of COCH-COSH and CCH
http://web.viu.ca/siemensr/C-C/2002/Lancashire.htm
- The Birth of Humanist
This is a link to the first email sent from Humanist by Willard McCarty on May 12 1987 from the Centre for Computing in the Humanities University of Toronto.
The welcome message sent on May 14 1987 says:
Welcome to HUMANIST
HUMANIST is a Bitnet/NetNorth electronic mail network for people
who support computing in the humanities. Those who teach, review
software, answer questions, give advice, program, write
documentation, or otherwise support research and teaching in this
area are included. Although HUMANIST is intended to help these
people exchange all kinds of information, it is primarily meant
for discussion rather than publication or advertisement...
To view the complete message thread please see the following link.
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/humanist/Archives/Virginia/v01/8705.1324.txt
Humanist: an online seminar for the digital humanities
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/humanist/announcement.html
"HUMANIST: Lessons from a Global Electronic Seminar", Computers and the Humanities 26 (1992): 205-222
http://staff.cch.kcl.ac.uk/~wmccarty/essays/McCarty,%20Humanist.pdf
- The Centre for Computing in the Humanities is pleased to announce
its Graduate Programme in Humanities Computing for 1991-92, a
description of which follows here.
http://lists.village.virginia.edu/lists_archive/Humanist/v05/0286.html
- This link provides information about the first Summer Seminar of the Center for Electronic Texts in the
Humanities (CETH) in 1992. CCH was a co-sponsor. Link also provides a bit on the history of CCH. In the information on instructors the following can be found:
"Willard McCarty has been active in humanities computing since 1977.
With its founding Director, Ian Lancashire, he helped to set up the
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, University of Toronto, of
which he is now the Assistant Director. He was the founding editor of
Humanist, the principal electronic seminar for computing humanists,
and has edited several other publications in the field. He regularly
gives talks, papers, and lectures throughout North America and Europe.
McCarty took his Ph.D. in English literature in 1984; his current
literary research is in classical studies, especially the
_Metamorphoses_ of Ovid. In support of a forthcoming book, he has an
electronic edition of that poem underway for the text-retrieval
program Tact".
http://listserv.linguistlist.org/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind9204A&L=linguist&P=454
- Computing in the Humanities Working Papers
CH Working Papers (or Computing in the Humanities Working Papers) are an interdisciplinary series of refereed publications on computer-assisted research. They are a vehicle for an intermediary stage at which questions of computer methodology in relation to the corpus at hand are of interest to the scholar before the computer disappears into the background. Many of the papers from the following collections offer an academic view of the history of Humanities Computing.
Scholarly Discourse and Computing Technology: Perspectives on Pedagogy, Research, and Dissemination in the Humanities, 1997
R.G. Siemens and William Winder, eds
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/sd_intro.htm
Introduction: Technologising the Humanities / Humanitising the Technologies, 1998
R.G. Siemens and William Winder, eds
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/th_intro.htm
Scholarly Discourse and Computing Technology II: Perspectives on Pedagogy, Research, and Dissemination in the Humanities, 1999
R.G. Siemens and William Winder, eds
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/sd2_intro.htm
Canadian Humanities Computing 2003: Collaborative Mind Technologies
Barbara Bond and William Winder, eds.
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/CHC2003/
- Summary of CCH working papers Vol 1-4
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/cch.html
From Proceedings of international conference on / Actes du colloque international sur "Historical Dictionary Databases" (Toronto, 1991 = CCHWP, 2
- Editing and Concording the Dictionarius of Firmin Le Ver (1440)
Brian Merrilees, William Edwards, David Megginson
Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/merrily1/
- Le programme d'informatisation du Dictionaire critique de la langue française de l'abbé Jean-François Féraud (1787)
Philippe Caron, Louise Dagenais, Gérard Gonfroy
GEHLF-CNRS, Université de Limoges; Équipe Morin/Dagenais, Université de Montréal; TELMOO, Université de Limoges
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/feraud1/
- Structures du Corpus et de la Base Estienne-Nicot (1531-1628)
T. Russon Wooldridge
Department of French, University of Toronto
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/tiden/
- Le Projet CopuLex
T. Russon Wooldridge, Astra Ikse-Vitols, Terry Nadasdi
URLA 4 INaLF, Department of French, University of Toronto
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/copulex/
- Bilingual Dictionaries in an English Renaissance Knowledge Base
Ian Lancashire
Department of English, University of Toronto
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/chwp/lancash1/
Text Encoding Initiative (TEI)
The Text Encoding Initiative is an international research project, the
aim of which is to develop and to disseminate guidelines for the
encoding and interchange of machine-readable texts. It is sponsored by
the Association for Computers and the Humanities (ACH),
the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL),
and the Association for Literary and
Linguistic Computing (ALLC).
The project is funded by the U.S. National
Endowment for the Humanities, DG XIII of the Commission of the European
Communities, the Canadian Social Science and Humanities Research Council
and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Equally important has been the
donation of time and expertise by the many members of the international
research community who have served on the TEI's various Working
Committees and Working Groups.
http://xml.coverpages.org/edw26.html
ALLC/ICCH conferences
- Conference History
The first conference of the ALLC was held at Cambridge in 1970, and annually thereafter until 1988, when a protocol was agreed with the Association for Computing in the Humanities for the co-sponsorship of joint international conferences. The venue for these joint conferences alternates between Europe and North America. The first one took place in 1989 at the University of Toronto. 1997 marked a return to Canada, to Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. In 1998 the conference went for the first time to Eastern Europe.
http://www.allc.org/refdocs/conf.htm
- ALLC/ICCH conference,1989
A summary from Humanist.
http://lists.village.virginia.edu/lists_archive/Humanist/v02/0162.html
- The New Medium: ALLC/ICCH 1990
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/humanist/Archives/Virginia/v03/1120.html
Lexicons of Early Modern English (LEME)
Eighteen years ago, work on what is now LEME began with the entry of John Palsgrave's Lesclarcissement (1530), a large English-French dictionary dedicated to Henry VIII. Randle Cotgrave's French-English dictionary (1611) joined the Palsgrave in time for the 1992 ICAME conference at Nijmegen. Four more works were in place by the following year: Latin-English dictionaries by Sir Thomas Elyot (1538) and Thomas Thomas (1587), an Italian-English dictionary by William Thomas (1550), and an English hard-word lexicon by Robert Cawdrey (1604). John Florio's first Italian-English lexicon (1598) and Henry Cockeram's English dictionary (1623) were added by 1994. Two years later, the Early Modern English Dictionaries Database (EMEDD) went online at the Centre for Computing in the Humanities in Toronto with Palsgrave, the two Thomases, John Minsheu's Spanish-English lexicon (1599), John Bullokar's hard-word English dictionary (1616), and Thomas Blount's Glossographia (1656). By 1999, in its final form, EMEDD was supplemented with scientific glossaries by Bartholomew Traheron (1543) and John Garfield (1657), William Turner's herbal of 1548, Richard Mulcaster's word-list (1582), and Edmund Coote's hard-word glossary (1596).
http://leme.library.utoronto.ca/public/intro.cfm
The Orlando Project
This link gives a history of the project and brief information on researchers
http://www.ualberta.ca/ORLANDO/o-ACUT97.htm
SGML and the Orlando Project: Descriptive markup for an electronic history of women's writing
Susan Brown, Sue Fisher, Patricia Clements, Katherine Binhammer, Terry Butler, Kathryn Carter, Isobel Grundy, Susan Hockey
Computers & the Humanities; 1997/1998, Vol. 31 Issue 4, p271, 14p
Internet Shakespeare Editions
The Internet Shakespeare Editions (ISE) was founded in 1996 at the University of Victoria by the Coordinating Editor, Michael Best. Its academic development has been overseen by a distinguished Editorial Board, headed by our General Textual Editor, Eric Rasmussen (University of Nevada, Reno). In 1999, the ISE became a non-profit corporation. The database of Shakespeare in Performance has been headed since 2006 by Paul Prescott (University of Warwick).
http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Foyer/ISEoverview.html
Electronic Text Centre
Since its formation in 1996, the Electronic Text Centre at UNB Libraries has taken a leadership role in electronic scholarly communication, humanities computing, and digital libraries. The Centre advances and supports research and education, promotes the role of standards, and collaborates with faculty in these areas.
http://www.lib.unb.ca/Texts/index.php?id=1
COCH-COSH
- Program for the Annual Meeting COCH/COSH
at the 1997 Congress of Learned Societies, May 31 - June 1, 1997
Memorial University in St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada.
http://www.sdh-semi.org/conference1997.php
- Conference Program and abstracts for COCH/COSH 1998
Congress of the Social Sciences and the Humanities, May 27 - 28,
1998 University of Ottawa in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
http://www.sdh-semi.org/conferencefull1998.php
- Conference Program and abstracts for COCH/COSH 1999
Congress of the Social Sciences and the Humanities, June 3-4,
1999 University of Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada.
http://www.sdh-semi.org/conferencefull1999.php
- Conference Program and abstracts for COCH/COSH 2000
Congress of the Social Sciences and the Humanities, May 24-25,
2000 University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada.
http://www.sdh-semi.org/conferencefull2000.php
Multimedia at McMaster
The following paper also gives a brief history of humanities computing at McMaster University
- Is humanities computing an academic discipline?
Geoffrey Rockwell
http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/hcs/rockwell.html
- Rockwell, Geoffrey and Andrew Mactavish. Preprint of a chapter on “Multimedia” for
the Companion to Humanities Computing. Eds. Ray Siemens, Susan Schriebman, and
John Unsworth. London: Blackwell Press, to be published in 2004-5.
http://www.geoffreyrockwell.com/publications/Multimedia.pdf
The Humanities Computing Curriculum Conference 2001
November 9-10, 2001
Malaspina University College
Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada
Presenters and Presentation Abstracts:
http://web.viu.ca/siemensr/HCCurriculum/abstracts.htm
Humanities Computing at University of Alberta
- Abstract from 'The Humanities Computing Curriculum Conference' 2001 by Sean Gouglas.
The MA in Humanities Computing at the University of Alberta.
A new course of study, leading to the degree of Master of Arts in Humanities Computing, will be offered to students at the University of Alberta, starting in September 2001.
http://web.viu.ca/siemensr/HCCurriculum/abstracts.htm#Gouglas
- Humanities Computing: ENGL 417--link to course by David Miall offered in the fall of 1999
http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/~dmiall/hyperead/course.htm
- Theory into Practice
A Case Study of the Humanities Computing Master of Arts Programme at the University of Alberta http://ahh.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/1/2/167