„Federated Queries for Literary Studies”

MiMoText presentation at the International Conference: Linked Open Data and Literary Studies

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Date:

19.11.2024 bis 20.11.2024

Place:

Free University of Berlin
EXC 2020 “Temporal Communities”
Room 00.05
Otto-von-Simson-Strasse 15
14195 Berlin

For registration please contact: Lilly Welz, l.welz [at] fu-berlin.de (l[dot]welz[at]fu-berlin[dot]de)
Registration deadline: 12 November 2024
Please state your name, your academic degree and your institution when registering.

Categories:

Conference
On November 19 and 20, the international conference “Linked Open Data and Literary Studies” will take place at Freie Universität Berlin.

The international conference “Linked Open Data and Literary Studies” offers scholars a platform for the exchange of findings, methods and best practices for the use of LOD technologies in literary studies.

As part of the conference, Dr. Maria Hinzmann and Julia Röttgermann from the MiMoText team will give a presentation on “Federated Queries for Literary Studies: Querying Wikidata via the MiMoTextBase and the other way around”. 

Programme

Tuesday, 19 November

  • 9:30 | Welcome
  • 9:45 | Maria Hinzmann, Julia Röttgermann, Matthias Bremm, Tinghui Duan, Anne Klee, Johanna Konstanciak, Christof Schöch, Joëlle Weis (University of Trier): Federated Queries for Literary Studies: Querying Wikidata via the MiMoTextBase and the Other Way Around
  • 10:15 | Kata Dobás & Botond Szemes (HUN-REN RCH Institute for Literary Studies, Budapest): Wikidata and World Literature: Literary 'Memory' of the Visegrad Countries
  • 10:45 | Short Break
  • 11:00 | Danilo Penagos Jaramillo (University of Tübingen): Linked Open Data for a Data-Rich History of Hispanic American Literature
  • 11:30 | Patricia García Sánchez-Migallón (Universidad Complutense de Madrid): The PhiloBiblon Project
  • 12:00 | Lunch Break
  • 13:30 | Jonah Lubin (Harvard University) & Marco Antonio Stranisci (University of Turin): From 'Leksikon' to LOD: A Pipeline for Converting Unstructured Bibliographical Data on Yiddish Writers to Linked Open Data
  • 14:00 | Ondřej Vimr & Vojtěch Malínek (Institute of Czech Literature, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague): Building the European Literary Bibliography: Linked Open Data for Diverse and Multilingual Datasets
  • 14:30 | Karin Schmidgall (German Literature Archive): Let’s Talk about Data Quality
  • 15:00 | Break
  • 15:30 | Johanna Hähner (Pädagogische Hochschule Karlsruhe): The Reception of Postwar German Literature by the New Right: Exploring the Potential of Network Analysis and Linked Open Data
  • 16:00 | Bojana Aćamović (Institute for Literature and Art, Belgrade): Linking the Metadata of Periodicals to Uncover Literary Networks
  • 16:30 | Wrap-Up Day 1

Wednesday, 20 November

  • 09:45 | Aitana Bellido (Open University of Catalonia, Barcelona) & Marta Sangrà (Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona): The Global Novel Decentered: Poetic Challenges and Cross-Border Literary Circulation
  • 10:15 | Jan Horstmann, Immanuel Normann, Christian Lück (University of Münster): Intertextuality in the Semantic Web
  • 10:45 | Short Break
  • 11:00 | Franziska Pannach & Federico Pianzola (University of Groningen): The GOLEM Knowledge Graph: Modelling Fiction and Narrative Across Domains
  • 11:30 | Bernhard Oberreither (Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna): Text and Image Are the Same, or Close Enough at Least. Reflections on Expanding an Ontology for Intertextual Relations Towards Intermediality
  • 12:00 | Lunch Break
  • 13:30 | Ingo Börner & Peer Trilcke (University of Potsdam): Modeling Genre Dynamics
  • 14:00 | Gregory Crane (Tufts University) & Sergiusz Kazmierski (University of Regensburg): Translations as Gateways Rather than Endpoints
  • 14:30 | James Tauber (Boston): LOD of the Rings: Tolkien’s Sub-Creation as Linked Open Data
  • 15:00 | Break
  • 15:30 | Laura Untner (Freie Universität Berlin): From Myth to Metadata: Mapping Sappho’s Legacy Through Linked Data
  • 16:00 | Moniek Kuijpers (University of Basel): Online Book Reviews and Other Reader Response Corpora: A Rich but Overlooked Data Source in the Study of Literature’s Global Dimensions?
  • 16:30 | Wrap-Up Day 2

Keywords: Quantitative Analysis, Literary History, Linked Open Data