Digital Medievalist: Journal
Digital Medievalist (DM) is our on-line, refereed Journal. DM accepts work of original research and scholarship, notes on technological topics (markup and stylesheets, tools and software, etc.), commentary pieces discussing developments in the field, bibliographic and review articles, and project reports. All contributions are reviewed by authorities in humanities computing prior to publication. Contributions to DM should concern topics likely to be of interest to medievalists working with digital media, though they need not be exclusively medieval in focus. They should be of a length appropriate to the subject under discussion; in most instances this means between 1,000 and 10,000 words.
Digital Medievalist 8 (2012)
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Consultation of Manuscripts Online: a
qualitative study of three potential user categories
Philippe Chevallier -
Kodikologie
und Paläographie im digitalen Zeitalter 2 / Codicology and
Palaeography in the Digital Age 2, eds. Franz Fischer,
Christiane Fritze, and Georg Vogeler, in collaboration with Berhard
Assmann, Malte Rehbein, and Patrick Sahle, Schriften des Instituts für
Dokumentologie und Editorik 3, Norderstedt: Books on Demand, 2010. (ISBN
978-3-8423-5032-8, €58 at bookstores; electronic
version [pdf] free at http://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/4337/)
Juan Garcés -
Kiernan, Kevin. 2011. Electronic Beowulf
3.0. London: British Library. DVD-ROM. ISBN #9780712351010.
$45/£25.
Grant Leyton Simpson -
The Digital Edition of the Medieval Charters of the Abbey of
Saint-Denis: first results and prospects
Florence Clavaud
Digital Medievalist operates a policy of rolling release, meaning that articles are published as soon as they are available.
Digital Medievalist 7 (2011)
Contents
MARGOT Special Cluster
Guest Editors: Christine McWebb and Helen Swift-
Preface
Christine McWebb and Helen Swift -
Medievalists as Early
Adopters of Information Technology
John Unsworth -
Bytes, words, texts: The AND and its
Text-Base
David Trotter -
Building a Digital Research Community
in Medieval and Early Modern Studies: The Australian Network for
Early European Research
Toby Burrows -
The ARQUIBANC Project: Location,
Recovery, Arrangement, and Dissemination of Catalan Private Archives
and Documents
Elena Cantarell-Barella and Mireia Comas-Via -
Developing Digital Mappaemundi: An Agile
Mode for Annotating Medieval Maps
Martin Foys and Shannon Bradshaw -
New Textual Traditions from Community
Transcription
Frederick Gibbs -
TEI: Keeping it Simple
Thomas Hansen -
Developing an Online Database on a
Shoestring: Growing Pains at the Online Medieval Sources
Bibliography
Morgan Kay and Maryanne Kowaleski -
The Cantus Database: Mining for
Medieval Chant Traditions
Debra Lacoste -
The Janus Intertextuality Search
Engine: A Research Tool of (and for) the Electronic Manipulus florum
Project
Chris L. Nighman -
New Tools for Exploring, Analysing and
Categorising Medieval Scripts
Florence Cloppet, Hani Daher, Véronique Églin, Hubert Emptoz, Mathieu Exbrayat, Guillaume Joutel, Frank Lebourgeois, Lionel Martin, Ikram Moalla, Imran Siddiqi, and Nicole Vincent
Regular Articles
-
After the editing is done:
Designing a Graphic User Interface for digital editions
Roberto Rosselli Del Turco -
Calabrese, Michael, Hoyt N. Duggan
and Thorlac Turville-Petre, eds. 2008. The
Piers Plowman Electronic Archive Vol. 6: San Marino,
Huntington Library Hm 128 (Hm, Hm2). Cambridge:
Published for The Medieval Academy of America and the Society
for Early English and Norse Electronic Texts by Boydell &
Brewer. CD-ROM.
and
Adams, Robert, ed. 2011. The Piers Plowman Electronic Archive Vol. 7: London, British Library, MS Lansdowne 398 & Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Rawlinson Poetry 38 (R). Cambridge: Published for The Medieval Academy of America and the Society for Early English and Norse Electronic Texts by Boydell & Brewer. CD-ROM.
Kenna Olsen -
Burghart, Marjorie, ed. 2011. Album interactif de paléographie médiévale/Interactive
Album of Mediaeval Palaeography. Lyon: UMR 5648 CIHAM
<http://ciham.ish-lyon.cnrs.fr/paleographie/>
Dot Porter
Digital Medievalist operates a policy of rolling release, meaning that articles are published as soon as they are available.
Digital Medievalist 6 (2010)
-
Image Acquisition & Processing
Routines for Damaged Manuscripts
Melanie Gau, Heinz Miklas, Martin Lettner, and Robert Sablatnig -
Research Communities and open collaboration: the example of the Digital Classicist Wiki
Simon Mahony -
Greengrass, Mark and Lorna Hughes,
eds., 2008. The Virtual Representation of the
Past. Farnham: Ashgate. 226 pages.
Markus Naser -
Rehbein, Malte, Patrick Sahle, and
Torsten Schaßan, eds. 2009. Kodikologie und
Paläographie im digitalen Zeitalter, Codicology and Palaeography in
the Digital Age. Norderstedt: BoD. xxiv+349 pages.
Ségolène M. Tarte -
Hofmeister, Wernfried and Andrea
Hofmeister-Winter, eds., 2009 Wege zum Text.
Überlegungen zur Verfügbarkeit mediävistischer Editionen im 21.
Jahrhundert. Grazer Kolloquium 17.-19. September 2008.
Beihefte zu editio, Band 30. Tübingen: Niemeyer. 247 pages.
Florian Bambeck
Digital Medievalist 5 (2009)
-
O'Donnell, Daniel Paul. 2005. Cædmon's Hymn: A multimedia study, edition and archive. Woodbridge: D.S. Brewer. xxii + 261 pages + CD-ROM.
Peter A. Stokes -
Burnard, Lou, Katherine O'Brien O'Keeffe, and John Unsworth, eds. 2006. Electronic textual editing. New York: Modern Language Association of America. vii + 419 pages + CD-ROM.
Stephen Martin -
Terras, Melissa M. and Paul Robertson.
2006. Image to interpretation: Intelligent systems to
aid historians in the reading of the Vindolanda texts.
Oxford: Oxford University Press. xi + 252 pages.
Arianna Ciula -
Ciula, Arianna and Francesco Stella, eds.
2006. Digital philology and medieval texts.
Pisa: Pacini editore. 208 pages + CD-ROM.
Franz Fischer and Malte Rehbein
Digital
Medievalist 4 (2008)
"Though much is taken, much abides": Recovering antiquity through
innovative digital methodologies (Digital Classicist/Digital
Medievalist Special Issue).
In honour of Ross Scaife (1960-2008), without whose fine example of collaborative spirit, scrupulous scholarship, and warm friendship none of the work in this volume would be what it is.
-
"Though much is taken,
much abides": Recovering antiquity through innovative digital
methodologies: Introduction to
the special issue
Gabriel Bodard and Simon Mahony -
We are all together: On publishing a
Digital Classicist issue of the Digital
Medievalist journal
Gabriel Bodard and Daniel Paul O'Donnell -
The Inscriptions of Aphrodisias as
electronic publication: A user's perspective and a proposed paradigm
Gabriel Bodard -
The
application of network analysis to
ancient transport geography: A case study of Roman Baetica
Leif Isaksen -
Towards a digital model to edit the
different paratextuality levels within a textual tradition
Paolo Monella -
VLMA: A tool for creating, annotating and
sharing virtual museum collections
Amy Smith, Brian Fuchs, and Leif Isaksen
Digital Medievalist 2.1 (2006)
-
Experimental markup in a TEI-conformant setting
Patricia R. Bart -
Liturgy, Drama, and the Archive: Three conversions
from legacy formats to TEI XML
James Cummings -
P5-MS: A general purpose tagset for manuscript
description
M. J. Driscoll -
Designing the Old English Newsletter bibliography
database
Roy M. Liuzza -
Bernard J. Muir, ed. 2004. A digital facsimile
of Oxford, Bodleian Library MS. Junius 11. Software by Nick Kennedy.
Bodleian Library Digital Texts 1. Oxford: Bodleian Library.
Muray McGillivray
Digital Medievalist 1.1 (2005)
-
Welcome to Digital Medievalist
Daniel Paul O'Donnell -
Submission guidelines for The Digital Medievalist
Daniel Paul O'Donnell -
Towards the electronic Esposizioni: the challenges of the online commentary
Guyda Armstrong & Vika Zafrin -
Digital palaeography: using the digital representation of medieval script to support palaeographic analysis
Arianna Ciula -
A Progress Report on The Piers Plowman Electronic Archive
Hoyt N. Duggan with a contribution by Eugene W. Lyman -
Opening the Illustrated Incunable Short Title Catalog on CD-ROM: an end-user's approach to an essential database
Jonathan Green -
The source of the Napier fragment of Alfred's Boethius
Kevin Kiernan -
Current issues in making digital editions of medieval texts or, do electronic scholarly editions have a future?
Peter Robinson -
Why Universal Accessibility Should Matter to the Digital Medievalist
Kathryn Wymer

