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Tom White deposited The Future Demands Work: William Morris’s utopian medievalism in an age of precarity, flexibility, and automation in the group
TM Literary and Cultural Theory on MLA Commons 6 years, 8 months agoIMC paper for panel 374 Medieval Futura 1: Now, sponsored by the Medieval Studies Institute, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington and organised by Dr Andrea Whitacre.
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Tom White deposited The Future Demands Work: William Morris’s utopian medievalism in an age of precarity, flexibility, and automation in the group
CLCS Medieval on MLA Commons 6 years, 8 months agoIMC paper for panel 374 Medieval Futura 1: Now, sponsored by the Medieval Studies Institute, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington and organised by Dr Andrea Whitacre.
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Tom White deposited The Future Demands Work: William Morris’s utopian medievalism in an age of precarity, flexibility, and automation on MLA Commons 6 years, 8 months ago
IMC paper for panel 374 Medieval Futura 1: Now, sponsored by the Medieval Studies Institute, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington and organised by Dr Andrea Whitacre.
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Deborah Thorpe's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
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Jim Clifford's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
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Jim Clifford deposited Trading Consequences: A Case Study of Combining Text Mining and Visualization to Facilitate Document Exploration on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
Large-scale digitization efforts and the availability of computational methods, including text mining and information visualization, have enabled new approaches to historical research. However, we lack case studies of how these methods can be applied in practice and what their potential impact may be. Trading Consequences is an interdisciplinary…[Read more]
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Jim Clifford's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
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Jim Clifford's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
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The term Active History was coined through a collaborative brainstorming session, four people enjoying an early morning coffee in a Toronto cafe and thinking of a catchy term for a conference. If my memory is correct, we thought about “applied history,” and we thought about history that works for a better future. In the end, the two ideas were com…[Read more]
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Jim Clifford deposited Bootstrapping a historical commodities lexicon with SKOS and DBpedia on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
Named entity recognition for novel domains can be challenging in the absence of suitable training materials for machine-learning or lexicons and gazetteers for term look-up. We describe an approach that starts from a small, manually created word list of commodities traded in the nineteenth century, and then uses semantic web techniques to augment…[Read more]
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Deborah Thorpe deposited I Haue Ben Crised and Besy’: Illness and Resilience in the Fifteenth-Century Stonor Letters in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoThe modern and medieval meanings of words reporting ill health often bear little resemblance to one another. This article compares the use of ‘diseased’ and ‘sick’ in the fifteenth-century Stonor family letters. It examines the word ‘crased’, which implies physical ill health most directly, but also suggests emotional, psychological, or spiritua…[Read more]
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Jim Clifford's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
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Jim Clifford deposited Maitland’s Moment: Turning Nova Scotia’s Forests into Ships for the Global Commodity Trade in the Mid-Nineteenth Century on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
The intersection of local environments and global mobility transformed Maitland, Nova Scotia, and many other small villages on the Bay of Fundy into boomtowns between the 1860s and the 1880s. Maitland’s location at the mouth of a river flowing into the Bay of Fundy, along with an abundant supply of spruce and a growing global demand for the l…[Read more]
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Jim Clifford deposited Geoparsing history: Locating commodities in ten million pages of nineteenth-century sources on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
In the Trading Consequences project, historians, computational linguists, and computer scientists collaborated to develop a text mining system that extracts information from a vast amount of digitized published English-language sources from the “long nineteenth century” (1789 to 1914). The project focused on identifying relationships within the…[Read more]
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Deborah Thorpe deposited I Haue Ben Crised and Besy’: Illness and Resilience in the Fifteenth-Century Stonor Letters on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months ago
The modern and medieval meanings of words reporting ill health often bear little resemblance to one another. This article compares the use of ‘diseased’ and ‘sick’ in the fifteenth-century Stonor family letters. It examines the word ‘crased’, which implies physical ill health most directly, but also suggests emotional, psychological, or spiritua…[Read more]
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Ernesto Priego deposited Salut, Notre-Dame… in the group
Poetics and Poetry on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoA comic about the Notre-Dame cathedral 15 April 2019 fire, made by Ernesto Priego reusing images from various sources. References and Original Image Sources listed at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.7999418
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Ernesto Priego deposited Salut, Notre-Dame… in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoA comic about the Notre-Dame cathedral 15 April 2019 fire, made by Ernesto Priego reusing images from various sources. References and Original Image Sources listed at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.7999418
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Ernesto Priego deposited Salut, Notre-Dame… in the group
Comics Scholarship/Comics Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoA comic about the Notre-Dame cathedral 15 April 2019 fire, made by Ernesto Priego reusing images from various sources. References and Original Image Sources listed at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.7999418
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Ernesto Priego deposited Addressing Sylvia in the group
Poetics and Poetry on Humanities Commons 6 years, 9 months agoA comic by Ernesto Priego about Sylvia Plath’s last London address.
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