Medieval History
New PhD Studentship: Digital Resource of Palaeography
New PhD Studentship: Digital Resource of Palaeography
With apologies for cross-posting. Please note that this is *not* the post-doctoral position which was announced in December but is a new PhD studentship on the same project.
The Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King?s College London, is pleased to announce a PhD studentship in digital methods in palaeography funded by a European Research Council project, the ?Digital Resource of Palaeography, Manuscripts and Diplomatic?. The studentship is to be held in CCH as part of a PhD in Digital Humanities.
Context
The aim of Digital Resource of Palaeography is to bringing the methods and resources of digital humanities to bear on palaeographical exploration, citation and teaching of late Anglo-Saxon script. It involves a web resource which will allow scholars to rapidly retrieve digital images, verbal descriptions, and detailed characterisations of the writing, as well as the text in which it is found and the content and structure of the manuscript or charter. It will incorporate different ways of searching, using images, maps, timelines and image-processing as well as conventional text-based browsing and searching. The palaeographical content will focus on a case-study of vernacular English script from the eleventh century, but the project will allow scholars to test and apply new general developments in palaeographical method which have been discussed in theory but which have hitherto proven difficult or impossible to implement in practice. Some further details of the project are av!
ailable on the KCL news pages.
The studentship
Applicants should propose a research project which can benefit from and contribute to the Digital Resource in Palaeography project but which remains distinct from it. Possibilities may include the detailed study of a particular manuscript or small group of manuscripts. A comparative study could apply the research methodologies of the ERC project to a different corpus, perhaps focusing on the products of a single scriptorium or scribe, looking at variance and variation in script; or focusing on a corpus (such as manuscript fragments) that has proven difficult to manage with conventional approaches. Another possibility may be more methodological, focusing on the possibilities and limits of Digital Humanities in palaeographical scholarship.
The student will be based at King?s College London, in the Centre for Computing in Humanities and will benefit from the CCH PhD Seminar. A second supervisor will be assigned according to the requirements of the project. It is also expected that the student will maintain contact with other departments in King?s, such as History or English. The student will also have access to resources and seminars across the University of London more widely, including Senate House Library and its Palaeography Room, the Institute of Historical Research?s seminars and library, and seminars and expertise at the Institute of English Studies.
Value
For the three years of the studentship (starting no later than October 2011) the grant is c. ?14,000 per annum. Students liable to pay fees at the overseas rate are welcome to apply, but should make sure that they can cover the difference between the award and the full overseas fee. The studentship must be held full-time.
Eligibility, Timetable & Application Process
Applicants for these awards are expected to begin PhD study on 1 October 2011. Applicants should hold (or have nearly completed) a Master?s degree or equivalent in Old English, Anglo-Saxon/early Anglo-Norman history, or another relevant area of medieval studies. A good knowledge of the language(s) of the manuscripts under study is required (Old/Middle English and/or Latin), and a background or demonstrable interest in manuscript studies is highly desirable.
Applicants must submit the following documentation by the deadline of 1 March 2011:
1. An Admissions Application form & all supporting documents ? submitted to the Centre for Arts & Sciences Admissions (CASA) via the online admissions portal at www.kcl.ac.uk/graduate/apply/
2. A one page statement of interest including a description of the proposed research, submitted to
[email protected]3. A one-page statement of your research training, background and suitability to the project, submitted to
[email protected]4. A sample of written work (3000-5000 words), submitted to
[email protected]An interview will be arranged with shortlisted applicants, either face to face or by teleconference, after the closing date.
Enquiries
Please email Dr Peter Stokes at
[email protected] or telephone him on +44 (0)20 7848 2813 in the first instance with any queries about this studentship.
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Medieval History