This article discusses the potential of ‘historical bibliometric’ methodologies for understanding past cultures and offers a vision for how historical bibliometric research might be conducted on a comparative and global scale. Drawing on conceptual work being undertaken at the Western Sydney University in order to further develop and extend the widely respected ‘French Book Trade in Enlightenment Europe’ (FBTEE) database project, it explores how historians might proceed to correlate, map, and analyse multiple spatially referenced data sets pertaining to the creation, publication, dissemination, ownership, consumption, reception, policing, and geographic setting of texts. While the authors recognise the many dangers and limitations inherent ...
This article addresses contemporary trends in the history of the book, focusing on both research and...
The reception of Digital Humanities (DH) case studies in the humanities is still mixed. On the one s...
The use of computational approaches in history is not new (Boonstra et al 2004). However, until fair...
This article discusses the potential of ‘historical bibliometric’ methodologies for understanding pa...
The ARCHIVER project (Angus & Robertson Collection for Humanities and Education Research), based at ...
As the field of digital humanities grows, scholars are translating and adapting their investigative ...
It is increasingly acknowledged that the Digital Humanities have placed too much emphasis on data cr...
Academics are now writing histories of individual publishing firms and also collaborative multivolum...
Presented at “Big Data & Uncertainty in the Humanities”, University of Kansas, September 22, 2012. I...
Historical and literary studies of the history of the book and of reading habits in modern Anglo-Ame...
Intellectual history is traditionally text-based. Sometimes regarded as synonymous with the history ...
National bibliographies have been identified as a crucial resource for historical research on the ...
Computing and the use of digital sources and resources is an everyday and essential practice in curr...
This paper will propose that, rather than sitting on silos of data, historians that utilise quantita...
This paper is related to my current book project which explores the history and genealogies of digit...
This article addresses contemporary trends in the history of the book, focusing on both research and...
The reception of Digital Humanities (DH) case studies in the humanities is still mixed. On the one s...
The use of computational approaches in history is not new (Boonstra et al 2004). However, until fair...
This article discusses the potential of ‘historical bibliometric’ methodologies for understanding pa...
The ARCHIVER project (Angus & Robertson Collection for Humanities and Education Research), based at ...
As the field of digital humanities grows, scholars are translating and adapting their investigative ...
It is increasingly acknowledged that the Digital Humanities have placed too much emphasis on data cr...
Academics are now writing histories of individual publishing firms and also collaborative multivolum...
Presented at “Big Data & Uncertainty in the Humanities”, University of Kansas, September 22, 2012. I...
Historical and literary studies of the history of the book and of reading habits in modern Anglo-Ame...
Intellectual history is traditionally text-based. Sometimes regarded as synonymous with the history ...
National bibliographies have been identified as a crucial resource for historical research on the ...
Computing and the use of digital sources and resources is an everyday and essential practice in curr...
This paper will propose that, rather than sitting on silos of data, historians that utilise quantita...
This paper is related to my current book project which explores the history and genealogies of digit...
This article addresses contemporary trends in the history of the book, focusing on both research and...
The reception of Digital Humanities (DH) case studies in the humanities is still mixed. On the one s...
The use of computational approaches in history is not new (Boonstra et al 2004). However, until fair...