Découvrez le programme des conférences et de l'atelier nodegoat (modélisation et de visualisation de données historiques). L'entrée est libre mais sur inscription obligatoire.
Pour plus d'informations, merci de consulter le site web du colloque.
13:00 - 14:00 L’histoire numérique en contexte | Digital History in Context
Modération | Chair
Mareike König (Institut historique allemand Paris | German Historical Institute Paris)
The present and future of digital history and computational historical research. Brandon Sepulvado (U. Notre Dame)
Building a new Digital History Lab in a time of crisis: Between scholarship and "workforce development". James Mokhiber (U. New Orleans)
Pause | Break
14:15 - 15:15 Temps et espaces de l’histoire numérique | Time and Space of Digital History
Modération | Chair
Andreas Fickers (C2DH, Université du Luxembourg)
Hyperspaces for History: Multidimensional Mappings and Locating Uncertainties. Charles van den Heuvel (U. Amsterdam)
Searching for the first digital game featuring historical content: Is this digital history? Tobias Winnerling (Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf)
Pause | Break
15:30- 16:30Conférence plénière | Keynote
Distrustful Brothers 2.0 - On the relationship of quantitative history and "digital" history. Manfred Thaller (professeur émérite | emeritus professor U. Cologne)
16:30 - 17:30 Présentation de la formation doctorale du Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History - C2DH | Presentation of the Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History - C2DH doctoral training unit
Digital Historical Intertextuality or Challenging the Qualitative/Quantitative Fringe. Efthymis Kokordelis (Cologne Center for eHumanities)
Approches qualitatives et quantitatives des témoignages de la Shoah : retours d'expérience. Bieke Van Camp (U. Paul Valéry Montpellier 3)
Pause | Break
10:15 - 12:15 Modéliser et visualiser les données historiques | Modeling and Visualizing Historical Data
Modération | Chair
Marten Düring (C2DH, Université du Luxembourg)
Visualizing Visions. Floor Koeleman (Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History)
Automated semantic interpretation of architectural digital imagery: Writing and rewriting Postmodern Tel Aviv-Jaffa architectural history. Yael Allweil, Or Aleksandrowicz (Faculté d’architecture et de planification urbaine, Technion - Institut de technologie d’Israël | Faculty of Architecture and Town Planning, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology)
De la démarche fondamentale à la démarche appliquée : approche interdisciplinaire des dynamiques forestières de l'Avesnois (Nord). Marie Debarre (U. Valenciennes et Hainaut-Cambrésis)
13:30 - 15:30 L’histoire, les historiens et l’internet / History, Historians and the Internet (1)
Modération | Chair
Mareike König (Institut historique allemand Paris | German Historical Institute Paris)
Individual Histories in the Russian Internet: Participation and Autonomy?Milena Rubleva (Université nationale de recherche “Ecole des hautes études en sciences économiques”, Fédération russe | National Research University Higher School of Economics, Russian Federation)
The passion about amateur history on the Greek web during the current economic crisis. Panagiotis Zestanakis (U. Crète | Crete)
Born-Digital Sources: Web Archives and their Challenges. Richard Deswarte (U. East Anglia)
Permettre l'exploitation numérique d'archives par le biais de la numérisation enrichie d'un corpus de sources : retour d'expérience autour de la Bibliothèque Historique de l'Éducation. Solenn Huitric (Laboratoire de recherche historique Rhône-Alpes)
Pause | Break
15:45 - 17:15 L’histoire, les historiens et l’internet / History, Historians and the Internet (2)
Modération | Chair
Serge Noiret (Institut universitaire européen | European University Institute)
L'historien sur le fil de la toile : historiciser la fabrique mémorielle en ligne dans les années 2000 à partir des archives françaises du Web. Sophie Gebeil (U. Aix-Marseille)
A la recherche de "flame wars". Alexandre Hocquet, Frédéric Wieber (U. Lorraine)
8:30 - 10:00 L’histoire publique à l’ère numérique : changements et continuités | Oral History in the Digital Age : Change and Continuity
Modération | Chair
(Frédéric Clavert (C2DH, Université du Luxembourg)
L'histoire orale numérique: changements, continuités et défis. Myriam Fellous-Sigrist (King’s College London)
Multi-Media “Mosaic Modes” for Oral/Public History. Michael Frisch (U. d’ État de New York à Buffalo | SUNY at Buffalo)
Does Public History need to be digital ? / L’histoire publique doit-elle être numérique?Daphné Budasz, Romain Duplan, Iris Pupella-Nogues (La boîte à histoire)
Pause | Break
10:15 - 12:15 Représentations du passé | Representing the Past
Modération | Chair
Serge Noiret (Institut universitaire européen | European University Institute)
The Italian House/Museum of Joe Petrosino, An Anti-Mafia New York Police Officer. Marcello Ravveduto (Università degli Studi di Salerno)
The Spanish Flu in Dublin c.1918, from burial records to an interactive map. Richard Legay (Centre for Contemporary and Digital History - C2DH), Christopher Krupp (Trinity College Dublin)
Deconstructing Historical Massively Multiplayer Online Games: how people deal with an interactive past. Elias Stouraitis (U. ionienne | Ionian U.)
L'atelier digital de l'historien : Euchronie, entre histoire numérique et histoire publique. Rémy Besson (U. Montréal), Sébastien Poublanc (U. Toulouse, Labex Structuration des mondes sociaux)
Pause-déjeuner | Lunch Break
14:00 - 15:30 Histoire publique et perspectives locales, nationales et globales | Public History in Local, National and Global Perspectives
Modération | Chair
(Stéphane Michonneau | U. Lille SHS)
The Cow, the Mayor, a Glass of Wine: a Digital Public History Project on the hundredth edition of the Lausanne National Fair. Anne-Katrin Weber, Claire-Lise Debluë (U. Lausanne)
Le passé numérique d'une ville. Enjeux et potentialités de digital history à travers le projet "Open Jerusalem". Maria Chiara Rioli - Louise Corvasier (OpenJerusalem), Christophe Jacobs - Benjamin Suc (Limonade & Co)
Memorial Democràtic's project “Memory at a click”: an online archive as a reparation public policy. Gerard Corbella (Memorial Democràtic, Generalitat de Catalunya)
A well thought-out database for digital history projects allows for various modes of analysis, visualisation, and interconnectivity. Each database with historical data requires a thorough understanding of the underlying conceptual data model and logical data model. Moreover, the interface at hand has to be scrutinised as well. This workshop will deal with the following three distinct levels of any data modelling process:
1. Creating a conceptual data model
What are the types of information that can be identified in the research process, and how do they relate to one another?
2. Creating a logical data model
How will different kinds of information be stored and how to deal with vague / ambiguous / uncertain / contradictory / unique / irregular data?
3. Using a database application
Which options does the database application offer and how can the conceptualised data model best be implemented?
During the workshop, we will first focus on getting a good understanding of these three distinct levels and explore how these levels inform each other. After this, participants will be able to create/refine a data model of their own and learn how to implement this in nodegoat.
No prior knowledge is required to attend this workshop. Participants are required to bring their own laptop to the workshop. No new software has to be installed, as you only need to use a (modern) web-browser.