HC MID Devoted to the study of incompletely published primary sources

MID Hall of Fame: conference presentations

  • May 2017, Charlie Schufrieder and Melody Wauke, “Recovering the history of Iliadic scholia: architecture and initial results from the Homer Multitext project” (Heidelberg, Germany: “Digital Classics III: Re-thinking Text Analysis”)
  • May 2017, Alex Simrell, “The Importance of Citation in “Digital Humanities”: Producing a CTS Version of Tyrolean Neo-Latin Texts” (Innsbruck, Austria, Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Neo-Latin Studies).
  • April 2017, Alex Simrell, “Alex Simrell (Zagreb): Digitalna analiza imena mjesta u Bunićevu epu De raptu Cerberi” (Split, Croatia: Marulićevi Dani Conferene).
  • March 2017, Alex Simrell, “The Holy Cross Manuscripts, Inscriptions, and Documents Club: What We Do and How You Can Too!” (Dubrovnik, Croatia, Classical High School).
  • March 2017, with Stephanie Lindeborg ‘13 (Boston Latin Academy and Homer Multitext Project), Toni Armstrong (Clark University), Jeffrey Dickinson, Michael Raheb and Julia Spiegel, “Bringing Manuscripts into the Classroom.”
  • January 2017, with Neven Jovanovic (University of Zagreb), Alex Simrell “Digital commenting on place names in early modern Latin texts” (Leipzig, Germany: “Global Philology – Digital Infrastructure for Named Entities Data”)
  • October 2016, with Melody Wauke ’17 (with Neel Smith), “Data science in your Latin classroom,” Classical Association of Massachusetts.
  • July 2016, Brian Clark, Claude Hanley, Charlie Schufreider and Melody Wauke, “Using Digital Editions to Analyze Iliadic Text Reuse and its Poetic Tradition” (Kraków, Poland, Digital Humanities 2016). Published abstract.
  • July 2016, with Neven Jovanović (University of Zagreb), Alex Simrell,“Implementing Canonical Text Services in the Croatiae Auctores Latini Digital Collection” (Kraków, Poland, Digital Humanities 2016). Published abstract.
  • July 2016, with Neel Smith, Stephanie Lindeborg ‘13, “Comparing Digital Scholarly Editions”. Published abstract.
  • March 2016, Charlie Schufreider and Claude Hanley, “Collaborative digital editing in the Homer Multitext project” (Washington, D.C., Center for Hellenic Studies: visiting scholars talk).
  • Feb. 2016, Nik Churik ‘15, “Greek Explicating Greek: A Study of Metaphrase Language and Style” (Oxford University Byzantine Society’s 18th International Graduate Conference).
  • Nov. 2015, Claude Hanley, Stephanie Neville, Charlie Schufrieder and Alex Simrell “Digital Editions of Primary Documents: A Collaborative Modern Approach to Ancient Texts.” (Bucknell University, conference “Collaborating Digitally: Engaging Students in Public Scholarship”)
  • Sept. 2015, Nikolas Churik ’15 and Neel Smith, “Testable distant reading in scholia, lexica and paraphrases” (Grenoble, France, conference “Digital Humanities: the Example of Classical Antiquity”)
  • May 2015, Stephanie Lindeborg ’13 and Neel Smith, “Designing Digital Projects: Foundational Principles and Practical Solutions from the Homer Multitext project and Holy Cross Manuscripts Club” (Toronto, Canadian Classical Association)
  • March 2015, Stephanie Neville, Stephen Merola and Claude Hanley, “Representing the Scribal Tradition in Diplomatic Editions of Manuscripts of Jerome’s Chronicle”, Classical Association of New England annual meeting.
  • January 2015, Nikolas Churik, Brian Clark, Stephanie Lindeborg and Neel Smith, “Composing living scholarship: applying automated acceptance tests to scholarly writing” (conference “Scholarship in Software, Software as Scholarship”, Universität Bern). See conference program.
  • December 2014, Andrew Boudon, Nikolas Churik, Brian Clark, Mary Ebbott, Stephanie Lindeborg, Christopher Ryan, Alexander Simrell, and Neel Smith, “Digital Access and the Practicality of Citizen Scholarship” (workshop on “Greek and Latin in an Age of Open Data”). See abstract.
  • December 2014, Andrew Boudon, Nikolas Churik, Brian Clark, Mary Ebbott, Stephanie Lindeborg, Christopher Ryan, Alexander Simrell, and Neel Smith, “A Redefinition of Classical Scholarship” (workshop on “Greek and Latin in an Age of Open Data”). See abstract.
  • October 2014, with Brian Clark, “Unread Classics: Examples from the Holy Cross Manuscripts, Inscriptions and Documents Club” (The Hill School, Pottstown, PA).
  • May 2014, Leipzig University Center for Digital Technology:
    • Rebecca Finnigan ’15, “An unpublished manuscript of Archimedes”
    • Christine Bannan ’14, “Reassessing the Athenian Tribute Lists”
  • May, 2014, Christine Roughan and Neel Smith, “Constructing, Testing and Analyzing a Semantic Graph of Manuscript Features” (International Congress of Medieval Studies, Western Michigan University).
  • May 2014, Christine Roughan ’14, “Digital diplomatic editions of mathematical diagrams” (conference “Digital Access to Textual Cultural Heritage,” Madrid, Spain).
  • March 2014, keynote address at NEH Advanced Institute (Tufts University): Becky Musgrave ’14, Neil Curran ’14, Alex Simrell ’16, and Chris Ryan ’16 (Homer Multitext project), Stephanie Neville ’17, Charlie Schuhfrieder ’17, and Nick Jalbert ’16 and (Jerome’s Chronicles), and Megan Whitacre ’14 (Latin epigraphy)
  • March 2014, Becky Musgrave ’14, Neil Curran ’14, Alex Simrell ’16, Chris Ryan ’16, “Editing the Homer Multitext” at Boston Unversity conference “Shaping Homer”
  • Feb. 2013, Matt Angiolillo ’13, Tom Arralde ’13, Nik Churik ’15, Brian Clark ’13, Stephanie Lindeborg ’13 , Becky Musgrave ’14, “Research on manuscripts of the Homer Multitext project”, Tufts University, in the Digital Premodernist/Digital Classicist “works in progress” series.
  • December 2012, Matt Angiollilo, Thomas Arralde, Melissa Browne, Nikolas Churik, Brian Clark, Stephanie Lindeborg, and Rebecca Musgrave, “The Homer Multitext project” (abstract, paper and video published in the Sunoikisis Undergraduate Research Journal, available online here)
  • April 2012, Thomas Arralde, Stephanie Lindeborg and Christine Roughan, Council on Undergraduate “Posters on Capitol Hill” (Washington, D.C.), “Editing the oldest manuscript of the Iliad