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From Macbeth to Mucedorus: Changing How We Edit and Publish Early Modern Plays

Virtual Event Virtual Event

On April 23 at 6:00 PM (British Summer Time), Janelle Jenstad (University of Victoria) will discuss LEMDO during a presentation hosted by Animating Text Newcastle University. This talk aims to justify LEMDO’s objective to provide open-access editions of every surviving early modern text (1512-166), argue for a collaborative editorial practice, and describe its mechanism for publishing editions in sustainable digital anthologies, downloadable PDFs, and print-on-demand books.

Free

Epistemes indígenas en proyectos digitales de edición y archivo

Virtual Event Virtual Event

El 30 de octubre a las 3 PM EDT (UTC-4), Paloma Vargas Montes del Tecnológico de Monterrey reflexionará sobre cómo las humanidades digitales y el patrimonio cultural convergen en dos proyectos de investigación: La Crónica X: desmembrando su existencia a través de sus fuentes hermanas (Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia de México-Tec de Monterrey) y Epistemes Indígenas de la Frontera, financiado por la Mellon Foundation a través del US Latino Digital Humanities Center de la Universidad de Houston.

Free

Unlocking the U.S. Department of State’s “Consular Cards”: Experimenting with AI Transcription of Handwritten Historical Documents (A Webinar with FromThePage)

Virtual
Virtual Event Virtual Event

Do today's latest "AI" models offer capabilities not possible with traditional OCR, for unlocking documents whose handwritten contexts were impenetrable with previous technologies? A decade ago, the Office of the Historian scanned its "Consular Cards file", a collection of 6,500 handwritten index cards containing listings of officials at all U.S. diplomatic and consular posts from 1789-1960. A unique and foundational source for understanding the history of U.S. foreign relations, the utility of the scanned cards remained limited due to OCR's inability to extract text from the ornate cursive handwriting on these cards. Experiments conducted this year with multimodal AI tools have produced breakthrough, if imperfect, results. The talk will demonstrate the methodology and results of these experiments and will offer tips and caveats for scholars considering such tools.

Free