Symposium: DIGITAL SCHOLARLY EDITIONS AS INTERFACES (Graz, 23.-24.09.2016)

Date: 23.09.2016 – 24.09.2016

Venue: Karl-Franzens-Universit; RESOWI Building, Room  15.1; Universitätsplatz 3, 8010 Graz (Austria)

Hosted by: Centre for Information Modelling – Graz University

Programme chair: Georg Vogeler, Professor of Digital Humanities

Endorsed by: DiXiT

The Centre for Information Modelling – Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities at the University of Graz is inviting to a two days sympoisum on DIGITAL SCHOLARLY EDITIONS AS INTERFACES which is kindly endorsed by DiXiT. The symposium will discuss the relationship between digital scholarly editing and interfaces by bringing together experts of DSEs and Interface Design, editors and users of editions, web designers and developers. It will include the discussion of (graphical/user) interfaces of DSEs as much as conceptualizing the digital edition itself as an interface. Keynote Speakers are Dot Porter (University of Pennsylvania) and Stan Ruecker (IIT Institute of Design).

Programme

Day 1: Friday, 23.09.2016

9.00 Welcome

9.30  Keynote: Dot Porter, University of Pennsylvania/What is an Edition anyway? A critical examination of Digital Editions since 2002

10.15 Coffee break

Session 1: Readability, Reliability, Navigation

10.30 Ingo Börner, University of Vienna/The navigation of Digital Scholarly Editions – A corpus study

11.00 Eugene W. Lyman, Independent Scholar/Digital Scholarly Editions and the Affordances of Reliability

11.30  Christopher M. Ohge, University of California, Berkeley /Navigating Readability and Reliability in Digital Documentary Editions: The Case of Mark Twain’s Notebooks

12.00  Lunch break

Session 2: Visualisation, Typography and Design I

14.00 Elli Bleeker and Aodhán Kelly, University of Antwerp /Interfacing literary genesis: a digital museum exhibition of Raymond Brulez’ Sheherazade

14.30  Hans Walter Gabler, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, and Joshua Schäuble, University of Passau /Visualising processes of text composition and revision across document borders

15.00 Richard Hadden, Maynooth University/More than a pretty picture: network visualisation as an interface for Digital Scholarly Editions

15.30  Coffee break

Session 3: Visualisation, Typography and Design II

16.00 Daniel O’Donnell, University of Lethbridge /Let’s get nekkid! Stripping the user experience to the bare essentials

16.30  Shane A. McGarry, Maynooth University /Bridging the Gap: Exploring Interaction Metaphors That Facilitate Alternative Reading Modalities in Digital Scholarly Editions

17.00  Piotr Michura, Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow /Typography as interface – typographic design of text visualization for Digital Scholarly Editions

18.30 Keynote: Stan Ruecker, IIT Institute of Design/Task-Based Design for Digital Scholarly Editions

19:15 Reception

Day 2: Saturday, 24.09.2016

Session 4: How to program the interface

9.00 Hugh Cayless, Duke University Libraries/Critical Editions and the Data Model as Interface

9.30 Chiara Di Pietro, University of Pisa, and Roberto Rosselli Del Turco, University of Turin /Between innovation and conservation: the narrow path of UI design for the Digital Scholarly Edition

10.00 Jeffrey C. Witt, Loyola University Maryland /Digital Scholarly Editions as API Consuming Applications

10.30  Coffee break

Session 5: Theoretical implications

11.00 Arndt Niebisch, University of Vienna /Post-Human Texts? Reflections on Reading and Processing Digital Editions

11.30 Peter Robinson, University of Saskatchewan /Why Interfaces Do Not and Should Not Matter for Scholarly Digital Editions

12.00 Tara Andrews, University of Vienna, and Joris van Zundert, Huygens Institute for the History of The Netherlands /What Are You Trying to Say? The Interface as an Integral Element of Argument

12.30 Federico Caria, University of Rome La Sapienza /Evaluating digital scholarly editions: a focus group

13.00 Poster session

Narvika Bovcon, Alen Ajanović and Pija Balaban, University of Ljubljana /Designing a graphical user interface for digital scholarly edition of Freising Manuscripts

Dorothée Goetze and Tobias Tenhaef, Bonn University /APW digital – a Digitized Scholarly Edition

Elina Leblanc, Grenoble-Alpes University /Thinking About Users and Their Interfaces: The Case of Fonte Gaia Bib

Lunch break

Session 6: User oriented approaches I

14.30 Christina M. Steiner, Alexander Nussbaumer, Eva-C. Hillemann and Dietrich Albert, Graz University of Technology /User Interface Design and Evaluation in the Context of Digital Humanities and Decision Support Systems

15.00 Jan Erik Stange, University of Applied Sciences Potsdam /How close can we get to the reader? Co-creation as a valid approach to developing interfaces for scholarly editions?

15.30 Ginestra Ferraro, King’s College London, and Anna Maria Sichani, Huygens ING /Design as part of the plan: sustainability in digital editing projects

16.00 Coffee break

Session 7: User oriented approaches II

16.30 Stefan Dumont, Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften /“Correspondances” Digital Scholarly Editions of Letters as Interfaces

17.00 James R. Griffin III, Lafayette College/Encoding and Designing for the Swift Poems Project

17.30 Wout Dillen, University of Borås/The Editor in the Interface. Guiding the User through Texts and Images/

18.00 Closing

Programme: https://informationsmodellierung.uni-graz.at/de/aktuelles/digital-scholarly-editions-as-interfaces/

Registration (free of charge): http://goo.gl/forms/lmSHeYgodMf5owOv1

Schreibe einen Kommentar

Deine E-Mail-Adresse wird nicht veröffentlicht. Erforderliche Felder sind mit * markiert