Digital Humanities in Biblical, Early Jewish and Early Christian Studies
Digital Humanities in Biblical, Early Jewish and Early Christian Studies
Editors: Clivaz, Claire, Gregory andrew and Hamidovic, David
Publication Year: 2013
Publisher: Brill
Single-User Purchase Price:
$142.00

Unlimited-User Purchase Price:
$213.00
ISBN: 978-9-00-426432-8
Category: Religion & Theology
Image Count:
33
Book Status: Available
Table of Contents
In this text, contributors attest to the emergence of a conscious recognition of something new in the way that we may now study ancient writings, and the possibilities that this new awareness raises.
Table of Contents
- List of Contributors
- List of Abstracts
- Preface - Claire Clivaz, Andrew Gregory and David Hamidović
- Introduction: Digital Humanities in Biblical, Early Jewish and Early Christian Studies - Claire Clivaz
- PART ONE DIGITIZED MANUSCRIPTS
- The Leon Levy Dead Sea Scrolls Digital Library. The Digitization Project of the Dead Sea Scrolls - Pnina Shor
- Dead Sea Scrolls inside Digital Humanities. A Sample - David Hamidović
- The Electronic Scriptorium: Markup for New Testament Manuscripts - H.A.G. Houghton
- Digital Arabic Gospels Corpus - Elie Dannaoui
- The Role of the Internet in New Testament Textual Criticism: The Example of the Arabic Manuscripts of the New Testament - Sara Schulthess
- The Falasha Memories Project. Digitalization of the Manuscript BNF Ethiopien d'Abbadie 107 - Charlotte Touati
- PART TWO DIGITAL ACADEMIC RESEARCH AND PUBLISHING
- The Seventy and Their 21st-Century Heirs. The Prospects for Digital Septuagint Research - Juan Garcés
- Digital Approaches to the Study of Ancient Monotheism - Ory Amitay
- Internet Networks and Academic Research: The Example of New Testament Textual Criticism - Claire Clivaz
- New Ways of Searching with Biblindex, the Online Index of Biblical Quotations in Early Christian Literature - Laurence Mellerin
- Aspects of Polysemy in Biblical Greek. A Preliminary Study for a New Lexicographical Resource - Romina Vergari
- Publishing Digitally at the University Press? A Reader's Perspective - Andrew Gregory
- Does Biblical Studies Deserve to be an Open Source Discipline? - Russell Hobson