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IMC 2022: Sessions

Session 1702: Life and Afterlife of Digital Projects in Medieval Manuscript Studies, III

Thursday 7 July 2022, 14.15-15.45

Sponsor:ERC Project 'Patristic Sermons in the Middle Ages (PASSIM)', Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Organiser:Gleb Schmidt, UFR d'histoire, Université Paris I - Panthéon-Sorbonne
Moderator/Chair:Shari Boodts, Latijnse Literatuurstudie, KU Leuven
Paper 1702-aThe Brepolis Latin Databases: Decades Old, Still Alive
(Language: English)
Tim Denecker, Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (FWO), Vlaanderen
Yannick Anné, Centre 'Traditio Litterarum Occidentalium' (CTLO), Brepols Publishing, Turnhout
Index terms: Computing in Medieval Studies, Language and Literature - Latin
Paper 1702-b30 Years of the Base de Français Médiéval Сorpus: A Way towards Open Data and Diversity of Annotation
(Language: English)
Alexey Lavrentev, 'Interactions, Corpus, Apprentissages, Représentations' (ICAR lab - UMR 5191), Université Lumière Lyon II / École Normale Supérieure de Lyon
Index terms: Computing in Medieval Studies, Language and Literature - French or Occitan
Paper 1702-cScholarly Society as Data-Publishing and Data-Sustaining Communities: Building and Sustaining the Scholastic Commentaries and Texts Archive (SCTA)
(Language: English)
Jeffrey C. Witt, Department of Philosophy, Loyola University Maryland
Index terms: Computing in Medieval Studies, Manuscripts and Palaeography, Theology
Abstract

While carrying out a large-scale digital project in medieval manuscript studies, scholars must cope with multiple acute problems laying beyond purely scientific defining its purposes and goals. Often, following the constantly renewed vision of the studied material, the very scope of the project tends to evolve blurring the initially intended limits of the work. What steps should be taken in order to secure the reusability of the data accumulated from the very beginning of the project?

The perpetualization of the collected data together as well as the sustainability of the created infrastructure and the data models in use constitute another non-negligible problem which is intimately connected with the problem of interoperability of the data. The latter, apart from theoretical challenges to develop good data models, also implies many legal aspects, above all in the situations when the use of commercial datasets (e. g. copyrighted editions or proprietary databases and/or corpora) is inevitable. How can a mutually beneficial cooperation be achieved? What should be done to create a network of enterprises and to ensure the sustainability and interoperability of different kinds of data gathered independently within numerous and diverse projects, both public and private? Finally, every single project is carried out within given institutional and financial circumstances. What strategies may be applied to secure the 'afterlife' of the project, its enriching, and maintenance after the end of funding? The session is intended to summarize and share experience of the research teams which have been working on long-lasting digital projects within the field of medieval manuscript studies.