Indologie

Paper & Pixel: Digital Humanities in Indology

22.-27.07.2014

PROGRAMM & EINLADUNG

Privatdozentin Dr. Heike Oberlin <heike.oberlinspam prevention@uni-tuebingen.de>
Dr. des. Elena Mucciarelli <elena.mucciarellispam prevention@indo.uni-tuebingen.de>

The core of the Summer school is to develop and deepen the knowledge of young scholars and researchers working on textual material by using methods of the digital humanities. Especially with regard to manuscripts and rare books, this workshop deals with the process of digitizing, text structuring and encoding and its benefits for research. By using means of the digital humanities textual sources can be analysed in multiple ways and there are chances for new interdisciplinary approaches.

We will concentrate on material from the geographical area of India, with a special focus on South India. Actually there are quite a lot of projects in international Indology starting to apply methods of digital humanities to Indological resources (corpora). The Summer school is meant to give new input to students and researchers to develop their skills with regard to the technical issues as well as the conceptualization and organization of this kind of textual material. All scholars invited are involved in manuscriptology as well as in digital processing and the display of texts.

The Summer school aims at bringing together different scholars with experiences in this field and offer the students the chance to join this platform for exchange of knowledge and of best practices.

Supported by the Institutional Strategy of the University of Tuebingen (DFG, ZUK 63) / DFG-Workshop im Rahmen der Exzellenzinitiative der Universität Tübingen, zusammen mit der UB Tübingen und dem eScience Center.

Programme

22.07.2014 – University Library
Digitization, standards and practices for different materials
10.00-10.45: Marianne Dörr (University Library, Tübingen)
10.45-11.30: Fabian Schwabe (eScience Centre, Tübingen) [ppt and first samples of the eScience Center]
11.30-12.00: coffee break
Digital Humanities infrastructures – opportunities for Indology

12.00-12.30: Peter Gietz (DAASI International GmbH)
The Digital Corpus of Sanskrit: Background and research application
12.30-13.00: Oliver Hellwig (University of Heidelberg)
Designing specialized databases for Indological studies
13.00-13.30: Anand Mishra (University of Heidelberg)
13.30-15.30: lunch break
Workshop: “How would the best possible Virtual Research Environment for Indologists look like?”
15.30-17.00: Peter Gietz, Oliver Hellwig, Anand Mishra

23.07.2014 – University Library
Text processing and encoding: Indology and computer philology
10.00-10.45: Matthias Ahlborn (University of Würzburg) [ppt as pdf]
The Wicked Spell of Angle Brackets: The Sanskrit Manuscript Project, Cambridge
10.45-11.30: Camillo Formigatti (University of Cambridge)
11.30-12.00: coffee break
Practical exercise: Manuscripts and XML language
12.00-13.30: Camillo Formigatti (University of Cambridge)
13.30-15.30: lunch

24.07.2014 – University Library
The Epigraphia Carnatica – recourse pool for historians: A digitization project of the University Library of Tübingen
10.00-11.00: Cristina Bignami & Elena Mucciarelli (University of Tübingen)
The Gundert Legacy in the University Library of Tübingen: The development of the Malayalam script and language
11.00-12:00: Heike Oberlin (University of Tübingen) [ppt as pdf]
12.00-12.30: coffee break
Urdu-Hindi Talking Literary Archive: "Saath-Saath", Department of Indology Tübingen

12.30-13:30: Divyaraj Amiya & Satyendra Singh (University of Tübingen)
13.30-15.30: lunch break
Visit of the Tübingen University Library

15.30-17.00: Manuscript section, eScience Center, Dept. of Digitization

25.07.2014 – Department of Indology
Development and palaeographic peculiarities of the Grantha script
10.00-11.30: Saraju Rath (IIAS, University of Leiden)
11.30-12.00: coffee break
Selected readings in Indian collections of Grantha manuscripts

12.00-13.30: Saraju Rath (IIAS, University of Leiden)
13.30-15.30: lunch break
Workshop: Practical discussion and exercises on Grantha script
15.30-17.00: Saraju Rath (IIAS, University of Leiden)

26.-27.07.2014 – Department of Indology
Workshop
: Practical seminar on Malayalam palm-leaf manuscripts
Heike Oberlin (University of Tübingen) [ppt as pdf]

Useful links

Guidelines

Software & tools & infrastructure

Digitized texts in online DBs


Paper & Pixel II: Digital Humanities in Indology

17.-21.12.2015

Privatdozentin Dr. Heike Oberlin <heike.oberlinspam prevention@uni-tuebingen.de>
Dr. Elena Mucciarelli <elena.mucciarellispam prevention@indo.uni-tuebingen.de>

Download the programme here

Programme

17.12.2015
University Library, Wilhelmstraße 32
12:00-13:30: Digital Humanities: infrastructures & opportunities for Indology.
Heike Oberlin, Elena Mucciarelli
13:30-15:30: lunch break
15:30-17:00: Virtual Research Environment for Indology. Peter Gietz

18.12.2015
Brechtbau, Wilhelmstraße 50
15:30-17:00: Socio-semantic network analysis on the example of the Mahābhārata. Sven Sellmer

19.12.2015
Brechtbau, Wilhelmstraße 50
10:00-11:30: Does machine understand Manuscripts? Sree Ganesh Thotempudi
11:30-12:00: coffee break
12:00-13:30: Python for Digital Humanities. Sree Ganesh Thotempudi
13:30-15:30 lunch break
15:30-17:00: Round Table

20.12.2015
Brechtbau, Wilhelmstraße 50
12:00-13:30: Titus, Gretil, Sarit, Sanskrit library etc.: Presentation and discussion of some digital Sanskrit text collections. Matthias Ahlborn
13:30-15:30 lunch break
15:30-17:00: The Orissa Project: Data through time and space. Matthias Lang

21.12.2015

Brechtbau, Wilhelmstraße 50
10:00-11:30: The making of a study on the Grantha script in manuscripts. Marco Franceschini
11:30-12:00: coffee break
12:00-13:30: A Real Object in the Virtual World. Camillo Formigatti
13:30-15:30: lunch break
15:30-17:00: Practical exercise: South Asian manuscripts and TEI. Camillo Formigatti

Useful links

Guidelines

Software & tools & infrastructure

Digitized texts in online DBs