LINGUIST List 26.1652

Fri Mar 27 2015

TOC: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (DSH) 30/1 (2015)

Editor for this issue: Andrew Lamont <alamontlinguistlist.org>


Date: 20-Mar-2015
From: Carolyn Napolitano <Carolyn.Napolitanooup.com>
Subject: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (DSH) Vol. 30, No. 1 (2015)
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Publisher: Oxford University Press
http://www.oup.com/us

Journal Title: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (DSH)
Volume Number: 30
Issue Number: 1
Issue Date: 2015


Main Text:

Digital Scholarship in the Humanities: the new name for LLC

Timed to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the journal, the new name reflects the huge changes that have taken place in the field over recent years. DSH will continue to publish on all aspects of digital scholarship in the Humanities including, but not limited to, the field of what is currently called the Digital Humanities.

Read Volume 30 Issue 1 online now at http://www.oxfordjournals.org/page/6309/2

Table of Contents:

Editorial: 30 Years of Academic Service
by Edward Vanhoutte

Ranking contemporary American poems
by Michael Dalvean

Analysis of lexical ambiguity in Modern Greek using a computational lexicon
by Panagiotis Gakis, Christos Panagiotakopoulos, Kyriakos Sgarbas, and Christos Tsalidis

A corpus-based study of nominalization in English translations of Chinese literary prose
by Yu Hou

A syntactic characterization of authorship style surrounding proper names
by Ana Lučić and Catherine L. Blake

Open Access

Oral History and the Hidden Histories project: towards histories of computing in the humanities
by Julianne Nyhan, Andrew Flinn, and Anne Welsh

Factoid-based prosopography and computer ontologies: towards an integrated approach
by Michele Pasin and John Bradley

On the features of translationese
by Vered Volansky, Noam Ordan, and Shuly Wintner

On the distributional regularity of shot lengths in film
by Mike Baxter

Horseshoes, handgrenades, and model fitting: the lognormal distribution is a pretty good model for shot-length distribution of Hollywood films
by Jordan DeLong

The log-normal distribution is not an appropriate parametric model for shot length distributions of Hollywood films
by Nick Redfern

Reviews:

Distant Reading. Franco Moretti.
Reviewed by Peter Boot

Defining Digital Humanities. A Reader. Melissa Terras, Julianne Nyhan and Edward Vanhoutte (eds).
Reviewed by Peter Boot

Read now at http://www.oxfordjournals.org/page/6309/2


Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics
                            Ling & Literature
                            Semantics
                            Syntax
                            Text/Corpus Linguistics
                            Translation

Subject Language(s): Chinese, Mandarin (cmn)
                            English (eng)
                            Greek, Modern (ell)

Page Updated: 27-Mar-2015