American Council of Learned Societies
Occasional Paper No. 41


Computing and the Humanities:
Summary of a Roundtable Meeting


Appendix E.

ILLUSTRATIVE WEBSITES
FOR COMPUTING AND THE HUMANITIES


Organizational

American Arts and Letters Network
American Council of Learned Societies
American Historical Association
American Studies Crossroads Project
Argos Limited Area Search of the Ancient and Medieval Internet
Arts and Humanities Data Service
Association for Computers and the Humanities
Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing
Carnegie Mellon University
Coalition for Networked Information
Comp Lit 50A: Homer to Renaissance
Computer Science and Telecommunications Board
CTI Textual Studies
Decameron Web
Digital Library Federation
Digital Libraries Initiative
Duke Papyrus Archive
Earlham College
Electronic Text Center at the University of Virginia
Electronic Visualization Laboratory, University of Illinois, Chicago
English Language and Literature URLs, Yale University
Getty Information Institute
GTE
Humanities Text Initiative, University of Michigan
Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville
Internet Movie DataBase
Internet Shakespeare Editions Home Page
King's College London
The Labyrinth: Resources for Medieval Studies, Georgetown University
National Academy of Engineering
National Endowment for the Arts
National Endowment for the Humanities
National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage
Orlando Project
Perseus Project
Shakespeare and the Globe
Text Encoding Initiative
Thesaurus Linguae Graecae
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Vassar College
Virginia Tech University
Voice of the Shuttle


Individual

Stephen Franklin, University of California, Irvine
Michael Joyce, Vassar College
Willard McCarty, King's College London
Jerome Saltzer, MIT
Mary Shaw, Carnegie Mellon University



Contents
I. Introduction and Background
II. Toward a Common Language: Methods and Context
III. Software and Standards Development
IV. Economic and Institutional Issues
V. Next Steps: Talk First to Select Actions Better
Notes | APPENDICES

Back to Top