Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Digital Spatial Infrastructures and Worldviews in Pre-Modern Societies New edition [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Uppsala University), Edited by (Society for Danish Language and Literature)
This volume examines new ways to design, develop, explore, and visualize spatial datasets to investigate spatial dimensions and world perceptions in pre-modern sources and societies.

The study of medieval and early modern geographic space, literary cartography, and spatial thinking at a time of rapid digitization in the Humanities offers new ways to investigate spatial knowledge and world perceptions in pre-modern societies. Digitization of cultural heritage collections, open source databases, and interactive resources utilizing a rich variety of source materials—place names, early modern cadastral maps, medieval literature and art, Viking Age and medieval runic inscriptions—provides opportunities to re-think traditional lines of research on spatiality and worldviews, encourage innovation in methodology, and engage critically with digital outcomes.

In this book, Nordic scholars of philology, onomastics, history, geography, literary studies, and digital humanities examine multiple aspects of ten large- and small-scale digital spatial infrastructures from the early stages of development to the practical applications of digital tools for studying spatial thinking and knowledge in pre-modern sources and societies.

List of Illustrations
vii
Introduction 1(14)
Alexandra Petrulevich
Simon Skovgaard Boeck
PART ONE DIGITAL SPATIAL INFRASTRUCTURES IN THE HUMANITIES
Chapter 1 Norse World from Plan to Action: Building a Digital Gazetteer of East Norse Medieval Literature Step by Step
15(18)
Alexandra Petrulevich
Simon Skovgaard Boeck
Chapter 2 Mapping Saints: Creating a Digital Spatial Research Infrastructure to Study Medieval Lived Religion
33(26)
Sara Ellis Nilsson
Terese Zachrisson
Anders Frojmark
Lena Liepe
Johan Ahlfeldt
Chapter 3 Medieval to Modern: Using Spatial Data from the Digital Projects Icelandic Saga Map and Nafnio is to Explore the Interaction between Narrative and Place in Iceland
59(32)
Emily Lethbridge
Chapter 4 TORA: Topographical Register at the Swedish National Archives
91(24)
Olof Karsvall
Chapter 5 Toward Digital Spatiality: Rethinking the World's Largest Placfe-Name Collection
115(22)
Bjorn Karlsson
Kristina Neumuller
Elin Pihl
PART TWO BUILDING AND SUSTAINING DIGITAL SPATIAL INFRASTRUCTURES: CHALLENGES AND SOLUTIONS
Chapter 6 Place-Name Databases: A Spatio-Temporal Mess
137(22)
Peder Gammeltoft
Chapter 7 Sustainability and Best Practices for Linked Data Heritage Resources: Some Case Studies from Sweden
159(26)
Agnieszka Backman
Marcus Smith
Chapter 8 Integrating Time and Space in a Digital-Historical Administrative Atlas
185(20)
Peder Dam
Chapter 9 A Digital Periegesis: Implementing Spatial Research Infrastructures for Classical History and Archaeology
205(22)
Anna Foka
Elton Barker
Kyriaki Konstantinidou
Nasrin Mostofian
Brady Riesling
Linda Talatas
O. Cenk Demiroglu
Kajsa Palm
PART THREE THE NORSE PERCEPTION OF THE WORLD: MEDIEVAL SPATIALITY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
Chapter 10 Flores Travels to Babylon: Flores och Blanzeflor in Its European Context
227(16)
Sofia Loden
Chapter 11 Place-Name Variation in Medieval Literature in the Digital Age
243(24)
Alexandra Petrulevich
Chapter 12 Nameless Places
267(14)
Simon Skovgaard Boeck
Concluding Remarks 281(10)
Stuart Dunn
Index 291