58 research outputs found

    Discussing Interfaces in Digital Scholarly Editing

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    Interfaces define how research material is presented. They shape the view recipients acquire from historical sources. Since the digital medium is more open to variations than the once traditional form of presenting Scholarly Editions in printed book form, discussions on how to deal with the new possibilities started at a very early stage after the emergence of digital scholarly editions. In the beginning these were strongly influenced by traditional presentation practices but have shifted to aspects more associated with the digital paradigm. Theoretical approaches towards interfaces, however, were only sporadically published and have been continuously demanded by the scholarly community. This introduction attempts to summarize the scholarly discussions on interfaces and provides an overview of the papers presented in these proceedings: they offer both theoretical approaches and discussions of practical implementations together with studies evaluating interfaces

    KONDE - A network brings together research and GLAM institutions. A project report

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    Seit Frühjahr 2017 läuft als Hochschulraum-Strukturmittel-Projekt das „Kompetenznetzwerk Digitale Edition“ (KONDE), das sich den Prämissen der Open Science Community verpflichtet fühlt und darauf zielt, Voraussetzungen für die Etablierung einer nachhaltigen, nationalen Publikationsplattform für Digitale Editionen (DE) für geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftliche Disziplinen (GSK) zu schaffen. Beiträger*innen der Universitäten Graz, Innsbruck, Klagenfurt, Salzburg und Wien, sowie der Technischen Universität Graz und der Kunstuniversität Graz, gemeinsam mit Fachkolleg*innen der Österreichischen Nationalbibliothek, der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften und des Adalbert Stifter-Instituts des Landes Oberösterreich haben sich das Ziel ge­setzt, eine Forschungsinfrastruktur für Digitale Editionen aufzubauen und österreichweit vorhandene Kompetenzen in diesem Bereich zu bündeln. Diese Infrastruktur soll keinesfalls nur als Hardware-Lösung oder Sammlung technischer Lösungsansätze verstanden werden, sondern möchte das Thema DE auch aus methodisch-theoretischer Sicht systematisch aufarbeiten und die Arbeits- und Diskussionsergebnisse der einschlägigen Scientific Community in einem interaktiven Weißbuch „Digitale Edition“ zur Verfügung stellen.The project “Kompetenznetzwerk Digital Edition” (KONDE) is funded by the Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy and has been operational since spring 2017. It is committed to the premises of the Open Science Community and aims to create conditions for the establishment of a sustainable publication platform for digital editions (DE). Contributors from the Universities Graz, Innsbruck, Klagenfurt, Salzburg and Vienna, the Technical University Graz and the University of Arts Graz together with colleagues from the Austrian National Library, the Austrian Academy of Sciences and the Adalbert Stifter Institute of the Province of Upper Austria, have set themselves the goal of establishing a research infrastructure for digital editions and pooling their expertise in this field throughout Austria. This infrastructure should by no means be understood merely as a hardware solution or a collection of technical solutions. It will also approach the topic of DE from a methodological-theoretical point of view and make the work and discussion results available to the scientific community in an interactive white paper on digital editing

    Events: Modellierungen und Schnittstellen

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    Abstract fĂĽr das Konferenzpanel "Events: Modellierungen und Schnittstellen", DHd202

    In search of traces of the mandrake myth: the historical, and ethnobotanical roots of its vernacular names

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    Mandrake (Mandragora spp.) is one of the most famous medicinal plant in western cultures since Biblical times and throughout written history. In many cultures, mandrake is related to magic and witchcraft, which is said to have a psychosomatic effect (especially when mandrake contains narcotic compounds) in addition to the pharmacological influence, as occurs with other narcotic magical plants. Due to its unique properties and related myths, it is not surprising that this plant has many names in many languages. Methods: This paper presents an attempt to reconstruct the historical, ethnobotanical, and folkloristic roots of 292 vernacular names of Mandragora spp. in forty-one languages. We used the plant’s morphological data, philology, myths and legends, medicinal properties and uses, as well as historical evidence and folkloric data, to explain meaning, origin, migration, and history of the plant’s names. Results: The names were classified into the following main categories: Derivatives of mandragora (19 languages), alraun (7) and of yabroukh (5). The salient groups of the plant’s vernacular names are related to: Anthropomorphism (33 names in 13 languages); Similarity to other plants (28/9); Supernatural agents (28/9); Narcotic effects (21/8); Leaves, fruits, and seeds (21/8); Aphrodisiac properties (17/10); Use of a dog (15/9); Gallows (14/5); Black magic, sorcery, witchcraft (13/8), and Medicinal use (11/7). Conclusions: This frequency distribution of the mandrake’s vernacular names reflects its widespread reputation as related to the doctrine of signatures, beliefs in its supernatural, natural, and mythic powers, and to a lesser extent, its uses in magic and medicine. A spatiotemporal analysis of the mandrake’s names supports the old idea that the pulling ceremonies for this plant originated in the Near East and that various other myths related to this plant may have originated in different places and periods

    Digital Scholarly Editions as Interfaces

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    The present volume “Digital Scholarly Editions as Interfaces” is the follow-up publication of the same-titled symposium that was held in 2016 at the University of Graz and the twelfth volume of the publication series of the Institute for Documentology and Scholarly Editing (IDE). It is the result of a successful collaboration between members of the Centre for Information Modelling at the University of Graz, the Digital Scholarly Editions Initial Training Network DiXiT, a EC Marie Skłodowska-Curie Action, and the IDE. All articles have undergone a peer reviewing process and are published in Open Access. They document the current state of research on design, application and implications of both user and machine interfaces in the context of digital scholarly editions. The editors of the volume are grateful to the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions for enabling not only the symposium in 2016 but also the publication of the present volume with their financial support. Special thanks are also due to the staff of the Centre for Information Modelling, above all Georg Vogeler, who contributed to the successful organisation and completion of the symposium and this volume with their ideas and continuous support. Furthermore we want to thank all authors as well as all peer reviewers for the professional cooperation during the publication process. Last but not least we want to thank the many people involved in creating the present volume: Barbara Bollig (Trier) for language corrections and formal suggestions, Bernhard Assmann and Patrick Sahle (Cologne) for support and advises during the typese ing process, Selina Galka (Graz) for verifying and archiving (archive.org) all referenced URLs in January 2018, Julia Sorouri (Cologne) for the design of the cover as well as the artist Franz Konrad (Graz), who provided his painting “Desktop” (www.franzkonrad.com/gallery/desktop-2008-2010/) as cover image. We hope you enjoy reading and get as much intrigued by the topic “Digital Scholarly Editions as Interfaces” as we did

    Nachschlagewerke zur Editionswissenschaft

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    Bildformate

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    Open Access

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