LOFTS at the Intertextuality Workshop – Fondation Hardt

FondationHardtIntertextualité et humanités numériques: approches, méthodes, tendances – Intertextuality and digital humanities: approaches, methods, trends

February 14-15, 2014, Fondation Hardt, Vandœuvres, Genève

Program (PDF)
Materials from the workshop are available through the Tesserae blog

February 14

Presentation of Digital Projects

9:00
Opening of the workshop
Pierre Ducrey, Director of the Fondation Hardt

9:15
Intertextuality beyond words
David Bamman, Carnegie Mellon University

9:45
eTraces
Marco Büchler (University of Göttingen)

10:15
Break

10.45
TESSERAE
Neil Coffee (University at Buffalo, State University of New York), Neil Bernstein (Ohio University), Chris Forstall (University at Buffalo, State University of New York)

11:15
Leipzig Open Fragmentary Texts Series (LOFTS)
Monica Berti (University of Leipzig)

11:45
Musisque Deoque
Paolo Mastandrea (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)

12:15
Lunch

Existing Problems in the Study of Intertextuality

13:45
Time reserved for individual participants to bring texts/problems/issues they have been working on

15:15
Break

15:45
Time reserved for individual participants to bring texts/problems/issues they have been working on

16:15
Full group discussion: The practical study of intertextuality and the importance of digital methods for traditional philology. How can digital methods be useful today? Where will they lead in the future?

17:15
Informal presentations of digital projects

February 15

Intertextuality and Digital Humanities: Theory, Practice and Goals

9:20
Breakout groups: What are the consequences, if any, of digital methods for intertextuality theory?

10:30
Break

11:00
Full group discussion: Digital publishing and traditional publishing. Can we assemble digital texts showing intertextual links? What should a future commentary on a classical text look like?

12:00
Lunch

13:30
Full group discussion: What can digital technologies not capture or represent? Could we imagine them eventually doing so?

14:30
Blog entry writing time: Reflections on the workshop

15:30
Break followed by breakout groups: How should digital approaches to intertextuality be developed further? What should be the common goals of digital researchers and literary scholars?

16:30
Full group discussion: An agenda for future intertextual study

17:00
Concluding remarks

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