Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 15th June 2025, 06:51:36am WEST
Session Chair: Peter Boot, Huygens Institute for the History and Culture of the Netherlands
Location:B304 (TB)
64 places
Presentations
In-depth analysis of social networks of translations of literary narratives
Menno van Zaanen
South African Centre for Digital Language Resources, South Africa
Previous work showed major differences in social networks of main characters and their relations of translations of a narrative. Here, we investigate reasons why this is the case. Quality of named entity recognition has the largest impact, while differences in language preferences do not have a major impact.
Locative narratives: an open access to the renewal of place and self
Varvara Chatzi
NATIONAL AND KAPODISTRIAN UNIVERSITY OF ATHENS, Greece
This submission will focus on a recent locative narrative in the context of contemporary Greek literary production (2021-2022)- Ismini Gatos' america2 -and will reveal that space, time and body, in physical or digital terms can recontextualize the relationship of any user with the local environment and also with themselves.
Research on the Construction of a Digital Narrative Model for Chinese Historical Classics
Xinyi Yuan, Chengxi Yan, Min Yu
Renmin University of China, China, People's Republic of
This study constructs a digital narrative model for Chinese historical classics, supporting nonlinear, interactive storytelling and deep knowledge exploration through multidimensional narrative pathways.
11:00am - 11:10am
One tree to Yule them all? Reflexions on intertextuality and text transmission
Jean-Baptiste Camps, Kelly Christensen, Ulysse Godreau, Théo Moins
École nationale des chartes, Université PSL, France
This study explores the role of intertextuality in manuscript transmission using a Yule process model, extending previous birth-death approaches. Analysis of three major sets of medieval texts suggests that including speciation events better represents the heavy-tailed distribution of surviving witnesses per text.