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Transcribing 'Le Pèlerinage de Damoiselle Sapience': Scholarly Editing Covid19-Style

Authors :
Morreale, Laura
Sánchez Argüelles, Gerardo
Baldwin, Toby
Champeau, Estelle
Consagra, Piergiorgio
Conway, Melissa
Dameri, Debora
de Bakker, Anna
Fadel, Chris
Davis, Lisa Fagin
Francis, Kersti
Francis, Scott
Hebbard, Elizabeth
Iacobellis, Lisa D.
Jaime, Rafael
Kaplan, S.C.
Kozlowski, Benjamin
Gauthier, Charlotte
Lacarrière, Nathalie
Lahey, Stephanie J.
Lazaro, Nicolas A.
Mahoney-Steel, Tamsyn
Marszałek, Jagoda
Meiselman, Louis
Pedersen, Frederick
Pokorny, Lea D.
Postal, Caitlin
Powell, Sara
Reppert, Jaeden Alan
Siebach-Larsen, Anna
Strinati, Shannon
Strutzenbladh, Ebba
Taylor, Tristan B.
Morreale, Laura
Sánchez Argüelles, Gerardo
Baldwin, Toby
Champeau, Estelle
Consagra, Piergiorgio
Conway, Melissa
Dameri, Debora
de Bakker, Anna
Fadel, Chris
Davis, Lisa Fagin
Francis, Kersti
Francis, Scott
Hebbard, Elizabeth
Iacobellis, Lisa D.
Jaime, Rafael
Kaplan, S.C.
Kozlowski, Benjamin
Gauthier, Charlotte
Lacarrière, Nathalie
Lahey, Stephanie J.
Lazaro, Nicolas A.
Mahoney-Steel, Tamsyn
Marszałek, Jagoda
Meiselman, Louis
Pedersen, Frederick
Pokorny, Lea D.
Postal, Caitlin
Powell, Sara
Reppert, Jaeden Alan
Siebach-Larsen, Anna
Strinati, Shannon
Strutzenbladh, Ebba
Taylor, Tristan B.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

This article describes a methodological experiment conducted during the 13th Annual (Virtual) Schoenberg Symposium on Manuscript Studies in the Digital Age, hosted by the University of Pennsylvania, November 18–20, 2020. The experiment consisted of a “relay style” event in which three teams transcribed, revised, and prepared for submission to this journal a full edition of the “Le Pèlerinage de Damoiselle Sapience” and other texts from UPenn Ms Codex 660, ff. 86r–95v within the three-day timespan of the conference. The project used methods typical of crowdsourcing and drew participants from all over the world and from all different stages of their careers. After one group completed its work, the results were passed into the hands of the next. The final result—in the form of a finished manuscript edition, ready for submission to Digital Medievalist—was presented on the last day of the conference. The main purpose of this experiment was to demonstrate how the work of the transcriber and editor might be structured as a short-term digital event that relied wholly on virtual interactions with both the source materials and among collaborators. This method also reveals the positive aspects of the many challenges posed by working simultaneously, remotely, and globally.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, application/pdf, English, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1366051827
Document Type :
Electronic Resource