Literary and Linguistic Computing Advance Access first published online on February 22, 2005
This version published online on March 2, 2005
Literary and Linguistic Computing, doi:10.1093/llc/fqh041
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1 Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, The Netherlands
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. At the University of Groningen we have emphasized a simple view of humanities computing as computing in service of the humanities. This means that we seek to answer scholarly questions in linguistics, history, and art history by using the computer, exploiting especially its ability to process large amounts of data and the transparency of its processing. We have shied away from questions of digital culture, avoided overemphasis on pedagogical applications of computers, and eschewed visions of scientific revolution--including, in particular, the revolutionary idea that humanities computing is a discipline, preferring to think of it instead as a federation of disciplines, whose practitioners find it opportune to collaborate for reasons of some common problems. We have discovered that our ability to deal with large amounts of data marks the distinctive contributions we can make to humanities scholarship.
Original Papers
Computational Contributions to the Humanities
John Nerbonne, E-mail: nerbonne{at}let.rug.nl
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Abstract
The originally published version of this paper was incorrect. In the footnote on the title page, the names are incorrect. It should read: ‘in particular from Patrick Juola, Geoffrey Rockwell, and John Unsworth. Thanks also to Koen De Smedt, Willard McCarty and Lisa Lena Opas Hänninen. Also, on page 6, in the third line of Figure 2: the ‘u’ should still be a ‘barred u’ in the third line, as in the second line.
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