Érudit offre l'accès à de nombreuses collections de documents en sciences humaines et sociales : revues, livres et actes, thèses, rapports de recherche.
Vossian antonomasia is a stylistic device which attributes a certain property to a person by naming another (more well-known, more popular) person as a reference point. For instance, when Jim Koch is described as “the Steve Jobs of Beer”, certain qualities of Steve Jobs, be it entrepreneurship or persuasiveness, are assigned to Jim Koch, co-founder and chairman of the Boston Beer Company. VAs consist of three parts: a source (in our example “Steve Jobs”) serves as paragon to elevate the target (“Jim Koch”) by applying a modifier (“of Beer”) that provides the corresponding context. VA is named after Gerardus Vossius (1577– 1649), the Dutch classical scholar and author of rhetorical textbooks, who first distinguished and described VA as a separate phenomenon.
The European Association for Digital Humanities (EADH) will hold its inaugural annual conference, on the theme “Data in Digital Humanities” at the National University of Ireland, Galway from 7-9 December 2018.
F. Hoppe, T. Tietz, D. Dess\`ı, M. Sprau, M. Alam, and H. Sack. Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Humanities in the Semantic Web (WHiSe 2020) co-located with 15th Extended Semantic Web Conference (ESWC 2020), Heraklion, Greece, June 2, 2020 (online), volume 2695 of CEUR Workshop Proceedings, page 15--20. CEUR-WS.org, (2020)
K. Maase, and T. Müller. Populäre Serialität: Narration - Evolution - Distinktion: zum seriellen Erzählen seit dem 19. Jahrhundert, Transcript-Verlag, Bielefeld, (2015)
F. Arnold, and R. Jäschke. Proceedings of the Workshop on Natural Language Processing for Digital Humanities at ICON 2021, page 55--63. NLP Association of India, (2021)
S. Jänicke, T. Efer, M. Büchler, and G. Scheuermann. Computer Vision, Imaging and Computer Graphics - Theory and Applications, page 153--171. Cham, Springer International Publishing, (2015)