Call for submissions: Digital Humanities Master Class “Lexical Data, Manuscript Edition and Authority Data” – #DHMC2020

Place: Moulin d’Andé (Normandie, France)
Date: April 19-25, 2020
Conference website for submissions: https://dhmc2020.sciencesconf.org/

The gangs are back, and they have joined forces! Lexical Data and Deutsch-Französische Digital Humanities Master Class are combining their skills to help you improve yours!

Co-organized by DARIAH-EU, Inria, the German Historical Institute in Paris and Le Mans Université, with the support of the French Ministry for Higher Education, Research and Innovation, this 2020 edition will be Lexical Data, Manuscript Edition and Authority Data Masterclass in one, and will take place in the Moulin d’Andé (Normandie, France) from 19 to 25 April 2020.

DHMC2020 will bring together 30 European advanced trainees with experts to share experiences, methods and techniques for the creation, management and use of lexical data, digital scholarly editions and authority data.



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Quelle: https://dhdhi.hypotheses.org/6094

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GAG215: Wojtek, polnischer Soldatenbär

Quelle: https://www.geschichte.fm/podcast/zs215/

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The Wall: Der Mensch im Schatten der Mauer

Das LVR-Institut für Landeskunde und Regionalgeschichte, die Abt. für Mittelalterliche Geschichte des Historischen Instituts der Universität zu Köln und der Förderverein Geschichte in Köln e. V. laden in Kooperation mit dem Kölnischen Stadtmuseum und der Gesellschaft für Rheinische Geschichtskunde zu einer Tagung Ende November ein:

The Wall: Der Mensch im Schatten der Mauer

am 28. und 29. November 2019 im Kölnischen Stadtmuseum, Zeughausstraße 1–3, 50667 Köln.

Im November vor 30 Jahren fiel die Berliner Mauer, das wohl berüchtigtste Befestigungsbauwerk des 20.

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Quelle: http://histrhen.landesgeschichte.eu/2019/11/the-wall/

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Conference report: Transatlantic Perspectives on Digital Hermeneutics, October 10-12, 2019, GHI

“On 10-12 October 2019, the international conference ‘Digital Hermeneutics: from Research to Dissemination’ took place at the German Historical Institute (GHI) in Washington DC. The conference aimed to critically reflect on the radical impact of the digital turn on all stages of historical research, including archiving, research, analysis, interpretation and dissemination on a transatlantic level.” Read the full report by Tim Van Der Heijden, Juliane Tatarinov, and Gerben Zaagsma, C2DH, posted on November 5, 2019.

Quelle: https://href.hypotheses.org/1661

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