This conference may be of interest to members of this list:

The 12th Annual Lawrence J. Schoenberg Symposium on Manuscript Studies in the 
Digital Age
November 21-23, 2019

Hooking Up

The concept of linked open data is the holy grail of the digital humanities. 
Yet the problem of how to link information across platforms has existed since 
civilization began. As knowledge and learning expanded in pre-modern society, 
the problems associated with collecting, combining, and disseminating 
information inspired new approaches to and technologies for the material text. 
In the internet age, we continue to grapple with the same problems and issues. 
While technologies have changed, the questions remain the same.

This year's symposium explores the connections between historic and current 
approaches to data linkage in regard to manuscripts and manuscript research. 
Hooking Up addresses the topic from a variety of angles and considers how the 
manuscript book operates as a vehicle for information retrieval and 
dissemination from the technology of the page and the textual apparatus of a 
book, to the library, and finally, the internet. We will also consider such 
questions as how medieval practices of memory shaped information retrieval and 
gathering, how did the technology of the manuscripts book-in all its many 
forms-facilitate or hinder information processing, how can medieval solutions 
inform modern technologies, and how do modern technologies illuminate medieval 
practices? The program will also feature sessions highlighting projects that 
are advancing linked data technologies for manuscript researchers, including 
the T-AP Digging Into Data Challenge project Mapping Manuscript 
Migrations<http://mappingmanuscriptmigrations.org/>.

For more information and to register, go to 
http://www.library.upenn.edu/about/exhibits-events/ljs-symposium12.

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