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Digital Medieval studies : practice and preservation / edited by Laura K. Morreale, Sean Gilsdorf

Von: Morreale, Laura KMitwirkende(r): Gilsdorf, Sean [editor] | Morreale, Laura K [editor]Materialtyp: TextTextSprache: EnglischReihen: Collection Development, Cultural Heritage, and Digital Humanities SerVerlag: Amsterdam : Arc Humanities Press, 2022Copyright-Datum: ©2022Beschreibung: 1 online resource (128 pages)Inhaltstyp: Text Medientyp: Computermedien Datenträgertyp: Online ResourceISBN: 9781802700152Genre/Form: | FernzugriffAndere physische Formen: Print version: : Digital Medieval Studies--Practice and PreservationOnline-Ressourcen: Volltext Zusammenfassung: In the last decade, the terms "digital scholarship" and "digital humanities" have become commonplace in academia, spurring the creation of fellowships, research centres, and scholarly journals. What, however, does this "digital turn" mean for how you do scholarship as a medievalist? While many of us would never describe ourselves as "DH people," computer-based tools and resources are central to the work we do every day in offices, libraries, and classrooms. This volume highlights the exciting ways digital methods are expanding and re-defining how we understand, represent, and teach the Middle Ages, and provides a new model for how this work is catalogued and reused within the scholarly community. The work of its contributors offers valuable insights into how "the digital" continues to shape the questions medievalists ask and the ways they answer them, but also into how those questions and answers can lead to new tools, approaches, and points of reference within the field of digital humanities itself.
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E-Books MWN Osteuropa Online-Ressource E-22-e01043 (Regal durchstöbern(Öffnet sich unterhalb)) Verfügbar 61269

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In the last decade, the terms "digital scholarship" and "digital humanities" have become commonplace in academia, spurring the creation of fellowships, research centres, and scholarly journals. What, however, does this "digital turn" mean for how you do scholarship as a medievalist? While many of us would never describe ourselves as "DH people," computer-based tools and resources are central to the work we do every day in offices, libraries, and classrooms. This volume highlights the exciting ways digital methods are expanding and re-defining how we understand, represent, and teach the Middle Ages, and provides a new model for how this work is catalogued and reused within the scholarly community. The work of its contributors offers valuable insights into how "the digital" continues to shape the questions medievalists ask and the ways they answer them, but also into how those questions and answers can lead to new tools, approaches, and points of reference within the field of digital humanities itself.

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