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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Remix The Manuscript: Transcription Tools Dataset 2.0, Michelle Warren, Arielle Feuerstein
Remix The Manuscript: Transcription Tools Dataset 2.0, Michelle Warren, Arielle Feuerstein
Other Faculty Materials
The document posted here is an annotated dataset of digital tools for transcribing handwritten manuscripts. Release 2.0 was created in 2022-23 by Arielle Feuerstein as part of the ongoing project "Remix the Manuscript: A Chronicle of Digital Experiments.” The file attached here contains the dataset as completed on June 28, 2023 along with credits for prior contributors.
Reimagining History Dataset 3.0, Michelle R. Warren, Neil Weijer
Reimagining History Dataset 3.0, Michelle R. Warren, Neil Weijer
Other Faculty Materials
The Middle English prose Brut chronicle survives in nearly two hundred manuscripts. This corpus has been the subject of extensive study for more than a hundred years. The most recent research, however, has turned out to be the most fragile. In 2017, the multiyear digital humanities project “Imaging History: Perspectives on Late Medieval Vernacular Historiography” disappeared from the live Internet, only a decade after its publication. Shortly afterwards, we began a project called "Re-Imagining History"--to create a new dataset of information about the Brut manuscript corpus and learn how digital infrastructure might shape the production and preservation of historical data. …
Eng 150 U. S. Literature And Thought (19th C. American Literatue), Susan Amper
Eng 150 U. S. Literature And Thought (19th C. American Literatue), Susan Amper
Open Educational Resources
Why do so many women in 19th c. American fiction end up dead? Why are so many men in 19th c. American fiction single or why do they murder their wives to gain that status? Why does no superhero have a wife? The answers to all these questions and more can be found in this class. America, in the 19th c. had a literary Renaissance—a kind of rebirth. Most of the works we are going to study were produced in the short span of 35 years from 1835 to 1850. And not only was there a lot …