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Conference: Digital Classics III: Re-thinking Text Analysis 
Date: May 12–13, 2017
Venue: Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften (Karlsplatz 4, Heidelberg, Germany) 
Concluding conference of the project Der digital turn in den Altertumswissenschaften: Wahrnehmung – Dokumentation – Reflexion 
(Stelios Chronopoulos, Felix K. Maier, Anna Novokhatko)
 
Digital text analysis is increasing in prominence throughout the humanities. The ever growing availability of data has opened scholars to the possibilities of quantitative text analysis as a method of learning about the form and content of text. Greek and Latin text analysis in particular poses new questions through the development of text analysis tools and technologies.
The 2-day conference is planned to discuss best practices in methods, methodology, tools and technology and hermeneutical reflections on text analysis. 
This Call for Papers is oriented particularly to all kind of digital projects on Ancient Greek and Latin texts based on central questions such as 
levels and techniques for the analysis of large bodies of texts: morphosyntactical, style/register determining, textual-critical, content, hermeneutic
criteria for defining and recognizing items (letters, words, phrases and reference methods)
multimodal and multicodal capabilities of text
the relationship between text, e-text, and hypertext
the methods and perspectives of semiotic and semantic analysis of text/graphic relationship

The focus of the conference is an evaluation of the status quo in the digital analysis of Greek and Latin texts (literary and documents, papyri, manuscripts, inscriptions) – what sort of questions have been asked/answered/not yet answered/cannot be answered? Some speakers from non-classical fields have been invited, such experts in text analysis who can contribute to a broader overview of the issues.
We call scholars from all academic levels to submit abstracts (max. 500 words, for a 20-min paper followed by a 20-min discussion) by December 20, 2016 to Dr. Anna Novokhatko ([log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>). In particular, we are interested in theoretical and methodological approaches to analyzing classical texts either in research or for teaching purposes. 

The conference will be held in English.

Confirmed invited speakers (provisional titles included):
Rodney Ast (Heidelberg) The Humanities’ place in the Digital Humanities. A case study in Papyrology
Lou Burnard (Oxford) title to be specified
James Brusuelas (Oxford) Neural Classics? The wonders and problem of automation
Gregory Crane (Tufts/Leipzig) Greek and Latin in an Age of massive collections and global philology
Milad Doueihi (Paris) Digital materialism
Chiara Fedriani/Maria Napoli (University of Eastern Piedmont) Methodological and theoretical issues in the construction of a corpus for Greek/Latin bilingualism
Jan Christoph Meister (Hamburg) Digitizing the hermeneutic circle: Parameterizing 'context' in hermeneutic text annotation  
Bénédicte Pincemin (Lyon) Introduction to textometric methodology
Charlotte Schubert (Leipzig) Editing and Un-editing in Digital Classics
Tariq Yousef (Leipzig) Creating Dynamic Lexica through Bridge Languages

Schedule:
December 20, 2016: submission deadline
February 20, 2017: notification of acceptance/refusal deadline
May 12–13, 2017: conference in Heidelberg

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Stylianos Chronopoulos | Akademischer Rat
Seminar für Klassische Philologie der Universität Freiburg
Platz der Universität 3, 79085 Freiburg i.Br.
Tel. +49 (0)761 203 9488