TOC: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Vol. 31, No. 4

Vol. 31, No. 4

December 2016

http://dsh.oxfordjournals.org/content/31/4?current-issue=y

 

Original Articles

Words, words. They’re all we have to go on: Image finding without the pictures

Stephen Brown

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 671-688

 

Profile-based authorship analysis

Jonathan Dunn, Shlomo Argamon, Amin Rasooli, and Geet Kumar

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 689-710

 

Developing a framework for an advisory message board for female victims after disasters: A case study after east Japan great earthquake

Takako Hashimoto, Yukari Shirota, and Basabi Chakraborty

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 711-724

 

Deaf sentences over Ukraine: Mysticism versus ethics

Robert L. Hogenraad

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 725-745

 

Vive la différence: Tracing the (authorial) gender signal by multivariate analysis of word frequencies

Jan Rybicki

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 746-761

 

Towards sentiment analysis for historical texts

Rachele Sprugnoli, Sara Tonelli, Alessandro Marchetti, and Giovanni Moretti

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 762-772

 

Zonal text processing

Viatcheslav Yatsko

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 773-781

 

Special Section on Social Digital Scholarly Editing edited by Barbara Bordalejo and Peter Robinson

Introduction

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 782-784

 

Digital scholarly editing within the boundaries of copyright restrictions

Wout Dillen and Vincent Neyt

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 785-796

 

The reader-oriented scholarly edition

Paul Eggert

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 797-810

 

‘Why don’t we do it in the road?’: The case for scholarly editing as a public intellectual activity

Murray McGillivray

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 811-818

 

Documentation for the public: Social editing in The Walt Whitman Archive

Meg Meiman

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 819-828

 

The Grub Street Project: A digital social edition of London in the long 18th century

Allison Muri, Catherine Nygren, and Benjamin Neudorf

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 829-849

 

Archiving, editing, and reading on the AustESE Workbench: Assembling and theorizing an ontology-based electronic scholarly edition of Joseph Furphy’s Such is Life

Roger Osborne, Anna Gerber, and Jane Hunter

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 850-865

 

The Walt Whitman Archive and the prospects for social editing

Kenneth M. Price

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 866-874

 

Project-based digital humanities and social, digital, and scholarly editions

Peter M. W. Robinson

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 875-889

 

Reliable social scholarly editing

Peter Shillingsburg

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 890-897

 

The case of the bold button: Social shaping of technology and the digital scholarly edition

Joris J. van Zundert

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 898-910

 

Afterword

Gabriel Egan

Digital Scholarship Humanities 2016 31: 911-919