This paper highlights the importance of books as dynamic actors within the Republic of Letters by means of multi-layered visualizations of epistolary networks. In the past decade, it has become increasingly common to make use of networks to study shifts in early modern scholarly exchange. Originally, almost all of these studies employed a single-layered network where one node of the graph represents a correspondent, and an edge between a pair of nodes corresponds to a letter exchanged between them. However, reducing the complex society of the Republic of Letters to a network in which actors are connected by one single type suggests a static uniformity that barely takes into account the multi-faced dynamics of epistolary exchange. In additio...
This work describes a computational method for reconstructing clusters of social relationships among...
This article applies network analysis tools to letters written by and about English Benedictine nun...
Paratexts, such as dedication letters or epigrams, in early modern printed books can be used by hist...
This study uses computational techniques developed by social network scientists to reconstruct and a...
The early modern republic of letters has largely been analysed as an epi...
Science in the Early Modern World depended on the one hand on openness in scholarly communication, b...
This paper discusses the development of digital intellectual and technological geographies showing s...
This paper discusses the development of digital intellectual and technological geographies showing s...
First published in 2007, this volume explores the importance of correspondence and communication to ...
The Circulation of Knowledge: A Web-based Humanities’ Collaboratory on Correspondences and Learned P...
In recent years it has become common to speak about the republic of letters as a network. But this w...
| openaire: EC/H2020/101004825/EU//InTaVia Funding Information: PL, JT, and EH acknowledge funding f...
The scientific revolution of the 17th century was driven by countless discoveries in the observatory...
Between 1500 and 1800, a revolution in postal communication allowed ordinary men and women to scatte...
This paper presents a novel approach to create an RDF based e-version of the correspondence network ...
This work describes a computational method for reconstructing clusters of social relationships among...
This article applies network analysis tools to letters written by and about English Benedictine nun...
Paratexts, such as dedication letters or epigrams, in early modern printed books can be used by hist...
This study uses computational techniques developed by social network scientists to reconstruct and a...
The early modern republic of letters has largely been analysed as an epi...
Science in the Early Modern World depended on the one hand on openness in scholarly communication, b...
This paper discusses the development of digital intellectual and technological geographies showing s...
This paper discusses the development of digital intellectual and technological geographies showing s...
First published in 2007, this volume explores the importance of correspondence and communication to ...
The Circulation of Knowledge: A Web-based Humanities’ Collaboratory on Correspondences and Learned P...
In recent years it has become common to speak about the republic of letters as a network. But this w...
| openaire: EC/H2020/101004825/EU//InTaVia Funding Information: PL, JT, and EH acknowledge funding f...
The scientific revolution of the 17th century was driven by countless discoveries in the observatory...
Between 1500 and 1800, a revolution in postal communication allowed ordinary men and women to scatte...
This paper presents a novel approach to create an RDF based e-version of the correspondence network ...
This work describes a computational method for reconstructing clusters of social relationships among...
This article applies network analysis tools to letters written by and about English Benedictine nun...
Paratexts, such as dedication letters or epigrams, in early modern printed books can be used by hist...