Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Part of a Book (61)
- Article (59)
- Working Paper (16)
- Conference Proceeding (12)
- Preprint (12)
- Lecture (10)
- Book (3)
- Report (3)
- Other (2)
Language
- English (178) (remove)
Keywords
- Ökosystem (15)
- Antike (12)
- Klimaänderung (12)
- Region Berlin-Brandenburg (10)
- Wasserhaushalt (10)
- Biowissenschaften (8)
- Korpus <Linguistik> (8)
- Kunstgeschichte (8)
- Denkmalpflege (7)
- Historische Gärten (7)
Has Fulltext
- yes (178) (remove)
Institute
- Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften (45)
- Veröffentlichungen von Akademiemitgliedern (25)
- Akademienvorhaben Census of Antique Works of Art and Architecture Known in the Renaissance (14)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Globaler Wandel (13)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Gegenworte - Hefte für den Disput über Wissen (8)
- Akademienvorhaben Alexander-von-Humboldt-Forschung (7)
- Drittmittelprojekt Ökosystemleistungen (7)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Historische Gärten im Klimawandel (7)
- Akademienvorhaben Deutsches Wörterbuch von Jacob Grimm und Wilhelm Grimm (6)
- Akademienvorhaben Strukturen und Transformationen des Wortschatzes der ägyptischen Sprache. Text- und Wissenskultur im alten Ägypten (6)
- Akademienvorhaben Altägyptisches Wörterbuch (5)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Internationale Gerechtigkeit und institutionelle Verantwortung (4)
- TELOTA - IT/Digital Humanities (4)
- Veröffentlichungen externer Institutionen (4)
- ALLEA (3)
- BBAW (3)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Strukturbildung und Innovation (3)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Zukunft des wissenschaftlichen Kommunikationssystems (3)
- Akademienunion (2)
- Akademienvorhaben Die alexandrinische und antiochenische Bibelexegese in der Spätantike (2)
- Akademienvorhaben Schleiermacher in Berlin 1808-1834, Briefwechsel, Tageskalender, Vorlesungen (2)
- Drittmittelprojekt Proyecto Humboldt Digital (2)
- Initiative Qualitätsbeurteilung in der Wissenschaft (2)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe EUTENA - Zur Zukunft technischer und naturwissenschaftlicher Bildung in Europa (2)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Gentechnologiebericht (2)
- Akademienvorhaben Corpus Coranicum (1)
- Akademienvorhaben Digitales Wörterbuch der Deutschen Sprache (1)
- Drittmittelprojekt CLARIN-D (1)
- Drittmittelprojekt OCR-D (1)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Die Herausforderung durch das Fremde (1)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Klinische Forschung in vulnerablen Populationen (1)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe LandInnovation (1)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Psychologisches Denken und psychologische Praxis (1)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Sprache des Rechts, Vermitteln, Verstehen, Verwechseln (1)
- Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppe Zukunft der Arbeit (1)
- Veröffentlichungen von Akademiemitarbeitern (1)
Responding to the Antique : a rediscovered Roman Circus Sarcophagus and its Renaissance Afterlife
(2005)
The computer has come to play a transformative role in the ways we model, store, process and study text. Nevertheless, we cannot yet claim to have realised the promises of the digital medium: the organisation and dissemination of scholarly knowledge through the exchange, reuse and enrichment of data sets. Despite the acclaimed interdisciplinary nature of digital humanities, current digital research takes place in a closed environment and rarely surpasses the traditional boundaries of a field. Furthermore, it is worthwhile to continue questioning the models we use and whether they are actually suitable for our scholarly needs. There’s a risk that the affordances and limitations of a prevailing model may blind us to aspects it doesn’t support.
In her talk, Elli Bleeker discusses different technologies to model data with respect to their expressive power and their potential to address the needs of the scholarly community. Within this framework, she introduces a new data model for text, Text-As-Graph (TAG), and it’s reference implementation Alexandria, a text repository system. The TAG model allows researchers to store, query, and analyse text that is encoded from different perspectives. Alexandria thus stimulates new ways of looking at textual objects, facilitates the exchange of information across disciplines, and secures textual knowledge for future endeavours. From a philosophical perspective, the TAG model and the workflow of Alexandria raise compelling questions about our notions of textuality, and prompt us to reconsider how we can best model the variety of textual dimensions.
The recent discoveries of the Czech mission show clearly that Abusir formed with Saqqara a single geographical unit in ancient Egypt and that the modern separation of them is outdated. Abusir seems to have played the crucial role as the last area into which the necropolis expanded after exhausting the space occuppied by the Archaic Cemetery of North Saqqara. In fact, it is the last vestige before the move from the area (including Dahshur and Meidum) to Giza at the beginning of the Fourth Dynasty. The tombs of Hetepi and lty, discovered and explored during the past few years, are probably the final representatives of genuine Third Dynasty tomb evolution in the Saqqara-Abusir area which drew its last breath at the beginning of the Fourth Dynasty. These tombs undoubtedly belonged to the upper class in the society of the day, though certainly not to members of the royal family. Their characteristics clearly show exactly what preceded later tomb development at Meidum, Dahshur and Giza.
Some drawings from the >Paper Museum< of Cassiano dal Pozzo and the Berlin Codex Destailleur >D<
(2004)
Alexander von Humboldt’s descriptions of volcanic mountains in his travel journals (Reise auf dem Río Magdalena, durch die Anden und Mexico) show both his reliance on and impatience with literary conventions and travel narratives. Using Goethe’s Italienische Reise and Bürger’s Münchhausen as points of comparison for literary treatments of the volcano ascent, Humboldt’s process of writing is examined. Humboldt shows the failure of the existing discourse and begins to experiment with narratives which fragment and recombine personal and historical modes of writing with, in this case, images from new technical inventions which visualize landscape according to fundamental scientific principles. While the inclusion of scientific prose is relevant, Humboldt’s link to modernity is based on experimental narrative techniques which draw upon changing sets of discourse practices to describe complex realities.