Tag: Georgetown

We’re hiring!

We are hiring a Digital Humanities specialist!  The full job ad is on the Georgetown U HR site. In short:

  • this is a part-time (12-15 hrs/week) paid DH Specialist position (so paid but no benefits);
  • knowledge of Coptic “strongly preferred”;
  • needs to be able to work in the United States legally;
  • living in Washington, DC, preferred but not required- remote ok if willing to attend virtual meetings and travel to DC on occasion for team meetings;
  • digital skills a plus but not required

Perfect for a grad student or other researcher in Classics, Linguistics, Near Eastern Studies, Ancient History, Papyrology, Religious Studies, etc., looking to add part-time work to their schedule AND expand their digital skill set.  Apply via the site! We are looking to hire soon.

 

Recent presentations by Coptic Scriptorium team members (post 1 of 2)!

This fall, Coptic Scriptorium team members have presented their work in a number of environments.

Research Talk, Georgetown University Linguistics Speaker Series

In September, as part of the Georgetown University Department of Linguistics Friday Speaker Series, the project presented a summary of our latest work and our goals for the new NEH Digital Humanities Advancement Grant we received. “A Linked Digital Environment for Coptic Studies”.  Caroline T. Schroeder provided an overview of the project. Amir Zeldes presented the technology required to machine-process Coptic text in order to produce an annotated, digital corpus and linked online lexicon. Rebecca Krawiec discussed the research potential of an annotated digital corpus for research in early monasticism. Elizabeth Platte introduced the concept of linked data and demonstrated our linked geographic data features. (Christine Luckritz Marquis was scheduled present research on space and place in monastic literature but was unfortunately sidelined by a hurricane.)

Rebecca Krawiec, Elizabeth Platte, Amir Zeldes, Caroline T. Schroeder at Georgetown University, 2018

Rebecca Krawiec, Elizabeth Platte, Amir Zeldes, Caroline T. Schroeder at Georgetown University, 2018

Material of Christian Apocrypha Conference

In December, Caroline T. Schroeder gave a paper at the Material of Christian Apocrypha Conference hosted at the University of Virginia, under the auspices of the North American Society for the Study of Christian Apocryphal Literature.  Dr. Schroeder’s paper, “The Materiality of Digital Apocryphal Studies,” addressed the role of digital humanities in studying the colonial history of manuscripts, people and places in early Christian literature, and public humanities.  It was part of a panel on Christian Apocrypha and the Digital Humanities, which also included papers by James Walters (Rochester College) on “The Digital Syriac Corpus: A New Resource for the Study of Syriac Texts” and  Brandon Hawk (Rhode Island College) on “The Medieval Social Network of the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew”.  Datasets used in the presentation are available at Dr. Schroeder’s GitHub site.

Caroline T. Schroeder presenting about the manuscripts digitized by Coptic Scriptorium

Caroline T. Schroeder presenting about the manuscripts digitized by Coptic Scriptorium

Caroline T. Schroeder presenting visualizations of occurrences of proper names in some of Coptic Scriptorium's corpora

Caroline T. Schroeder presenting visualizations of occurrences of proper names in some of Coptic Scriptorium’s corpora

Previous Digital Coptic 2 Symposium and Workshop

On March 12-13 we hosted the Digital Coptic 2 Symposium and Workshop at Georgetown University, March 12-13, 2015. The full program is online. Day 1 featured presentations from scholars working in Coptic and/or Digital Humanities from around the world. Day 2 provided tutorials on Coptic SCRIPTORIUM along with discussions about future research. Watch the many videos of the presentations on our DC 2 YouTube channel along with reading the twitter backchannel at #copticdh.

(Oringally posted in March 2015 at http://copticscriptorium.org/)

Digital Coptic workshop and symposium at Georgetown University

Coptic SCRIPTORIUM is hosting a second workshop and symposium on Digital Humanities and Coptic Studies on March 12-13, 2015 at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. Program and Registration information is available.

 

(Previously posted in December 2014 on http://copticscriptorium.org/index.html)