Rahtz Prize 2024: Call for Nominations

Rahtz Prize for Ingenuity 2024 — Call for nominations and self-submissions

The TEI Consortium created the Rahtz Prize for TEI Ingenuity in memory of Sebastian Rahtz, who contributed significantly to the TEI infrastructure. The award is intended to honour Sebastian’s noteworthy technical and philosophical contributions to the TEI, and to encourage innovation in the TEI community. The Rahtz Prize for TEI Ingenuity is awarded to an individual or team judged to have made a significant contribution to the TEI-C’s mission in particular by means of non-commercial/openly-available projects or initiatives. Many members of the TEI community are engaged in exploring new ways of implementing and expanding the coverage of the TEI encoding system. It is hoped that the Rahtz Prize will not only recognize excellent work already completed, but through its celebration and dissemination of nominated works also encourage new projects and fresh approaches. The recipient(s) of the 2023 award will receive $1,000 USD or equivalent.

The TEI community is encouraged to nominate prospective candidates for the Rahtz Prize. Self-submissions will also be accepted. You do not have to be a member of the TEI-C to make a nomination or submission. The project/work nominated or submitted does not have to be from 2024.

Nominations and self-submissions should only be submitted through this form.

The form will allow both, nominations of other people’s projects and submissions of your own projects. Nominators and submitters will be asked to provide their name and contact details for the record and to ensure they are not robots. These data will not be published or otherwise shared, and will only be used for running the award process.

Nominations and self-submissions are due 1 August 2024 by midnight Hawaii/Aleutian Standard Time (HAST). Nominees will be contacted by the committee by 15 August and asked to submit their materials by 1 September 2024.

The Rahtz Prize winner will be announced in October at the TEI AGM at the annual conference.

For more information about the Rahtz Prize, including the nomination and application process, consult: https://tei-c.org/activities/rahtz-prize-for-tei-ingenuity.

On behalf of the Rahtz Prize Awards Panel: Constance Crompton (University of Ottawa), James Cummings (Newcastle University), and Frank Fischer (Freie Universität Berlin)

TEI-C Elections 2023

Introduction

In 2023, TEI Members will hold an election to fill 4 open positions on the TEI Technical Council (3-year term). There are 2 open positions on the TEI Board of Directors (3-year term).

The following people have been nominated and have agreed to stand as candidates for election to the TEI Technical Council and the TEI Board. They have all supplied a statement covering two aspects:

  1. a candidate statement in which they discuss their reasons for wishing to serve on the Board or Technical Council and what their particular goals would be.
  2. a biographical description focusing on their education, training, research, etc., relevant to the TEI.

A Note on Voting

Voting will be conducted via the OpaVote website, which uses the open-source balloting software OpenSTV for tabulation. OpenSTV is a widely used open-source Single Transferable Vote program.

TEI Member voters, identified by email address, will receive a URL at which to cast their ballots. Upon closing of the election, all voters who cast a vote will be sent an email with a link to the results of the election, from which it is also possible to download the actual final ballots for verification. Individual members may vote in the TEI Technical Council elections. The nominated representative of institutions with membership may vote for both the TEI Board and TEI Technical Council.

Voting will open on August 7, 2023

Voting closes on September 7, 2023 at 09:00 CEST

Candidate Statements: TEI Technical Council

Syd Bauman

Statement of purpose:

Syd is currently heavily invested in both the new chapter on computer mediated communication (CMC — roughly the guidelines for encoding e-mails, tweets, etc.); and in ATOP, the new processor for converting ODD to usable schemas. He would also like to see progress in several other areas: “User-oriented” efforts, e.g., creating documentation, recommendations, and customizations for particular constituencies or user groups; improving the look-and-feel (and flexibility) of custom documentation; and creating or commissioning reference implementations expanding the scope of the Guidelines, e.g. to include greater support for legal documents, a method for encoding acrostics, and advice in using IIIF. He is also eager to see technical improvements to the Guidelines, e.g., further automated constraint checking, greater simplicity and expressivityin the ODD language, changes in TEI pointers to better align TEI with the existing W3C XPointer framework, and improvements to the automated deprecation system.

Biography:

Syd came to the TEI through an interest in markup and markup languages. He became interested in SGML just prior to its publication in 1986, but did not start engaging with a real markup language until late 1990. At that time he was already working at the Brown University Women Writers Project, where his first major task was to convert WWP legacy data to be in line with the newly published TEI P1. He still works at the WWP as the Senior XML Programmer/Analyst, and ever since that first challenge he’s been thinking of ways to improve the TEI. From 2001 to 2007 Syd served the TEI as the North American Editor, and since 2013 on the Technical Council; thus he is familiar with the workings of the Council. He has been very active in the TEI community as a frequent presenter on TEI topics at conferences; by consulting closely with nearly ½ dozen TEI projects, and providing occasional assistance to another dozen or so; as a member of several SIGs and editor of the Library SIG’s _Best Practices for TEI in Libraries_; as the chair of the Council’s ATOP task force; and of course, through teaching numerous TEI workshops and seminars. Syd has an AB from Brown University in political science, and has worked as a systems programmer and a freelance computer typesetter.

Gustavo Fernández Riva

Statement of purpose:

As part of my work I regularly advise projects and instruct people on how to create editions with XML-TEI. As a result of this continuous exchange with students and other users of the TEI guidelines, I recognize a need to keep strengthening the TEI, particularly with regards to accessibility, outreach and innovation. As a member of the Technical Council I would like to focus not only on maintaining, expanding and improving the standard, but on incentivizing resources that help to broaden the community, make encoding and publishing XML editions easier, and integrate new technological developments (such as automatic transcription of handwritten sources). I am also committed to continuing the important work on internationalisation undertaken during the last years to help broaden the community in meaningful ways.

Biography:

I studied Comparative Literature at the University of Buenos Aires (Argentina) and Medieval Literature at the University of Porto (Portugal). My PhD dissertation at the University of Buenos Aires included a digital edition of medieval texts. I have held two postdoctoral positions in Germany researching different aspects of DH. Since the beginning of 2023, I have been a Research Associate in Digital Humanities at the University Library of Heidelberg, where I collaborate in the development of the library’s infrastructure for digital editions, heiEDITIONS.

Torsten Roeder

Statement of purpose:

As a dedicated TEI user, I have immensely benefited from the diligent work of the TEI consortium. With admiration for the decades of work invested in crafting the TEI guidelines, I seek a position on the TEI technical council, eager to learn from the council’s expertise and actively contribute my own knowledge.

My current focus lies in typography, collation, source descriptions, and TEI based frameworks/tools using TEI as an exchange format. I am particularly interested in expanding the guidelines to encompass born-digital heritage, which will likely play a vital role in future text collections and editions. Additionally, I aim to explore interfaces and interface descriptions within the TEI framework, and I have a keen eye on discussing solutions for the ecological sustainability of TEI related technologies.

I am honored by the opportunity to be considered for the TEI technical council and pledge to be a proactive and constructive member.

Biography:

I work at the newly founded Center for Philology and Digitality at the University of Wurzburg (Germany), managing digital scholarly editions and a research project on an early digital heritage collection.

With an academic background in musicology and Italian studies, I gained extensive expertise in TEI and related technologies during my PhD, while working on 19th century prints and manuscripts. I am an active member of the Institute for Documentology and Scholarly Editing (IDE) and currently serve as vice chair of the Scientific Coordination Committee for Editions in the German National Research Data Infrastructure consortium (Text+).

Nicholas Cole

Statement of purpose:

I am exited to stand for election to the TEI Technical Council and honoured to have been nominated by two people. I previously served a one-year term on the Council. This is perhaps the most important single community in all of digital humanities (the future of humanities?) and I am eager to make a substantive contribution.

My academic work is focused on the analysis of collaboratively edited texts, and involved a workflow that begins in the archives with digitization and transcription, through analysis of complicated materials, to the creation of resources for public dissemination and use in classroom settings.

I have a good knowledge of the TEI codebase and the knowledge necessary to make a strong technical contribution to the standard and the other infrastructure that supports the TEI. I am also keen to enhance support for disabled users.

If elected I will serve with commitment and energy.

Biography:

I am a Senior Research Fellow at Pembroke College, University of Oxford, where I run one of Oxford University’s digitial humanities projects (www.quillproject.net). I collaborate with institutions in America, France, Australia, and India, and have prioritized creating opportunities for students from non-traditional backgrounds to contribute meaningfully to research projects.

As well as working in the fields of legal history and political thought, my interests over the last 8 years have increasingly focused on the digital future of humanities scholarship, including efforts to improve data encoding, discovery, analysis, and visualization, and project sustainability.

Raffaele Viglianti

Statement of purpose:

During my tenure in the TEI council, my approach has focused on finding practical solutions and seeking a middle ground in the council’s discussions. My primary goals are moving the development of TEI Guidelines and schema forward effectively, as well as reducing barriers for users. This work strikes me as fundamental in order for TEI users to more easily achieve proficiency and create rich scholarly resources with our community standard. For example, since my early involvement with TEI, I have been pursuing an agenda that highlights the merits of ODD customizations and have redesigned and re-implemented the customization tool Roma, which I intend to continue perfecting and maintaining.

Finally, I regularly develop TEI software (on council and beyond) with longevity and sustainability in mind, by promoting low-tech and future-proof solutions. These approaches can make it progressively easier for council members to maintain the TEI ecosystem and for users to work with their TEI encodings sustainably regardless of their level of access to web infrastructure.

Biography:

Dr. Raffaele (Raff) Viglianti is a Senior Research Software Developer at the Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities, University of Maryland. His research is grounded in digital humanities and textual scholarship, where “text” includes musical notation. He researches new and efficient practices to model and publish textual sources as innovative and sustainable digital scholarly resources. Dr. Viglianti is currently an elected member of the Text Encoding Initiative technical council (until Dec 2023) and the Technical Editor of the Scholarly Editing journal.

Matthew Evan Davis

Statement of purpose:

I’m particularly interested in the ways that TEI can better reflect the material affordances of the manuscript and early printed object. The embedded transcription method has a lot of potential to capture the structure of the material object in ways that don’t divorce text from medium, but I feel it’s rarely used to that full potential. If elected to the board, I’d like to push for a reconsideration of the ways that content and context – in this case materiality and paratext – are reflected in how we build tools to make texts machine readable.

Biography:

Currently I am a Lecturer and Coordinator of the Graduate Theme in Digital Arts and Humanities at the University of British Columbia’s Okanagan campus. Prior to this I served in a number of postdoctoral positions, most recently as a ZKS-Lendrum Postdoctoral Fellow in the Scientific Study of Manuscripts and Inscriptions at Durham University. I currently working on a stylometric analysis of the corpus of the works of John Lydgate and continues to transcribe works for The Minor Works of John Lydgate Virtual Archive (in TEI, using embedded transcription), with an expectation that Lydgate’s mummings and disguisings will be available this year.

Joey Takeda

Statement of purpose:

I am deeply honoured to stand for election for TEI Technical Council. I was thrilled to join Council in January of this year, and I have, over the last 8 months, gained not only a deep appreciation of the intensive and thoughtful work required by Council members, but also a strong sense of how I can contribute my expertise to the ongoing development and improvement of the TEI Guidelines, Stylesheets, and Infrastructure.

My goal is to ensure that the TEI not only remains useful to its users, but can also adapt and respond to the community’s changing needs (technical, textual, social, and political). To me, this means building infrastructures that are transparent, inclusive, and equitable and that are guided by anti-racist and decolonial approaches to addressing oppressive and exclusionary practices and protocols. In particular, I hope to continue work on maintaining, rationalizing, documenting, and modernizing the TEI’s codebase and infrastructure to improve usability, sustainability, and accessibility. Specific goals include creating instructions, guidelines, and mechanisms to facilitate and encourage community contributions; rationalizing and improving Technical Council Working Documents (“TCWs”) so that they offer a robust and clear guide to Council’s practices; and facilitating the continued adoption of “minimal computing” and “Endings-compliant” approaches to the development of the Guidelines and TEI-C website.

Biography:

I am a Developer in the Digital Humanities Innovation Lab (DHIL) at Simon Fraser University, specializing in digital textual editions, text encoding, and digital preservation. At SFU, I regularly teach workshops on text encoding, XML, XPath, and XSLT, and minimal computing, and I have extensive experience in developing and maintaining TEI projects, authoring ODD customizations, and developing CI/CD pipelines for web applications. I currently serve as the Technical Director of The Winnifred Eaton Archive, a member of TEI By Example’s International Advisory Board, and a member of the Public Knowledge Project’s (PKP) Technical Advisory Board.

I hold an MA in English Literature from the University of British Columbia, where my research focused primarily on the digital humanities, textual studies, and Indigenous and diasporic literature in Canada, and I am currently pursuing a Masters of Library and Information Studies at the University of Alberta. Before joining SFU in 2020, I worked as a contract programmer for the University of Victoria’s HCMC on various projects (such as The Map of Early Modern London, The Landscapes of Injustice Digital Archive, and The Endings Project), and as a co-developer, with Martin Holmes, of staticSearch (https://github.com/projectEndings/staticSearch).

Candidate Statements: TEI Board

Julius Beneoluchi Odili

Statement of purpose:

To advance the objectives of the TEI-C Board

Biography:

Julius Beneoluchi Odili was born on the 15th of February, 1965. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in English Language and Education, a Master of Education in Educational Administration, Postgraduate Diploma in Computer Science Science, Mast of Science in Computer Science and a PhD in Computer Science. He is presently a Senior Lecturer in Mathematical Sciences Department and the Acting Director, Institute of Digital Humanities, Anchor University Lagos, Nigeria

Gimena del Rio Riande

Statement of purpose:

Since 2011 I have contributed to building a DH and TEI-interested community in many Hispanophone countries. Most of the TEI projects I have either coordinated or mentored relate the use of open source tools and standard languages to the encoding and publishing of multilingual texts.
I have been part of the TEI board of directors since 2018 and I would love to continue strengthening initiatives related to textual scholarship, open source technologies, multilingualism and community building outside and inside the consortium. I also aim to explore ways in which the TEI could grow as a more open and grassroots community. The TEI is a global and diverse community and it is important to investigate and put into practice different ways of participation that do not only relate to membership.

Biography:

Dr. Gimena del Rio Riande is Associate Researcher at the Instituto de Investigaciones Bibliográficas y Crítica Textual at CONICET, the government agency that fosters the development of science and technology in Argentina. Her main academic interests deal with Digital Humanities, Digital Scholarly Editions, and Open Research Practices in the Humanites.

She is the director of the Laboratorio de Humanidades Digitales (HD LAB) at CONICET and the first Postgraduate training in Digital Humanities in Argentina. She serves as Chief editor of the journal Revista de Humanidades Digitales and takes part of the board of directors at the Text Encoding Initiative Consortium and the Asociación Argentina de Humanidades Digitales. Since 2020, she is one of the DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals) Ambassadors for Latin America.

David Maus

Statement of purpose:

I am delighted to be nominated to stand for election for the Board of Directors. Professionally, I grew up wedged between library metadata formats and TEI encoded documents, developing a growing knowledge of markup technologies to garden all those trees. I value the TEI community as a nerdy and welcoming group with markup as the common denominator. Where else can you learn about the encoding of multilingual illustrated children’s braille books?

Yet there is room for improvement when it comes to TEI, the organization. If elected, I would like to focus on making TEI, the organization, more approachable. I hope to facilitate more timely and open communication. This includes, but is not limited to, coordinating the long overdue update of the homepage, drafting pragmatic guidelines for publishing to the homepage, and finding a solution for the dormant TEI wiki.

It is the organizational, not the technical, challenges I would help tackle. If not elected, my offer to help stands.

Biography:

I’m head of the research of development department at the State and University Library Hamburg. My team and I provide patron-facing information services, ranging from discovery systems to specialized XML processing. As part of my work, I act as a liaison to digital humanities research at the University of Hamburg and other higher education institutions. I’m the sole author of SchXslt, a modern implementation of the Schematron validation language for structured documents, and the main author of ATOP, the new TEI ODD processor. I serve on the program committee of the MarkupUK conference and act as speaker for QCovery, a regional consortium developing shared library services. I informally participate as a community representative in the standardization process of ISO Schematron.

Kevin McMullen

Statement of purpose:

I am honored to be nominated to stand for election to the TEI Board of Directors. While I have never been formally involved with TEI-C as an organization, I have worked on TEI-based projects since 2010 and am thus a long-time TEI user, fan, and advocate of the standard’s power to aid in the preservation of invaluable cultural materials. Having been involved in training dozens of students in the use of TEI—nearly all of them with no prior coding experience, let alone experience in TEI—I am a firm believer that introductory knowledge to TEI need not be a major intellectual or technological hurdle. I am therefore interested in helping to bring awareness of and training in TEI to a broader community, and in the process grow both the number of digitization projects as well as the organization’s membership. I am also interested in making more visible the ways in which TEI users, of any level, can contribute to and build upon the TEI guidelines and be involved in the active development of the standard. It would be my pleasure to serve and give back to the TEI community in whatever ways I can as a board member, and I thank you for your consideration.

Biography:

I am a Research Assistant Professor of English at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln (UNL) and a Fellow in UNL’s Center for Digital Research in the Humanities. Since 2018 I have served as project manager of the Walt Whitman Archive, and I have worked on the staff of the project since 2010. I also currently serve as the project manager of the Charles W. Chesnutt Archive, and am the co-founder and editor of Fanny Fern in The New York Ledger, a TEI-based online digital edition of the newspaper writings of the 19th-century American protofeminist Fanny Fern. For three years I served as president of the Digital Americanists society. I also occasionally teach classes on American literature and attempt to raise my three daughters in such a way that they grow up with no desire to go into academia (just kidding, sort of).

Emmanuel NGUE UM

Statement of purpose:

I am grateful to the members of the TEI Consortium who nominated me for election to the Consortium’s Board of Directors. I’ve been using the TEI framework in my linguistics study since 2014. Mainstream descriptive toolsets of structural, functional, and generative linguistics do not always lead to a consistent and transparent analysis of linguistic structures of African languages in the context of language diversity that characterises the social environment in which I carry out my research. This is especially true of tones. My contribution to the TEI is a proposal for the development of a standard for tonal encoding in Niger-Congo languages.

If elected to the TEI Board of Directors, my primary goal will be to advocate for TEI outreach in African linguistics circles.

Biography:

I am an Associate Professor of African languages and linguistics at the University of Yaounde 1 in Cameroon.
My research interests include the study of language as a socially emerging reality, language technologies and revitalisation, language and espistemological (in)justice.

My interest in language work is primarily motivated by an aspiration to work towards wellbeing and social justice. In this regard, I consider myself to be a language activist.

Between 2010 and 2020, I was involved in two large language documentation projects, the first as a research fellow and the second as a lead investigator. I am currently a member of the Endangered Languages Project’s Governance Committee.

I was the co-applicant and host of the first meeting of the Institute of Digital Humanities of Francophone Africa, which was held in Yaounde (Cameroon) in March 2022, with the goal of promoting Digital Humanities practices in less-endowed environments of higher education in Africa. I am currently the coordinator for the Association of Digital Humanities in Francophone Africa, as well as a member of the Humanistica Committee, the Francophone association of Digital Humanities.

Karen Bourrier

Statement of purpose:

I am delighted to stand for the TEI-C Board. I have been working with the TEI for more than ten years now. I was first introduced to TEI through workshops in 2010 with Julia Flanders and Syd Bauman at Brown and then Northeastern when I was a lecturer at Boston University. I also apprenticed with Elisha Beshero-Bondar and the Digital Mitford Project. Since then, I have been involved in two projects using TEI, Digital Dinah Craik, which encodes letters, and Mapping Victorian Literary Sociability, which encodes historic geographic information. I have taught with the TEI in graduate seminars and trained several research assistants to its standards.

Biography:

I am Professor of English and the University of Calgary, specializing in nineteenth-century literature, women’s writing, disability studies, and the digital humanities. I am the author of is the author of The Measure of Manliness: Disability and Masculinity in mid-Victorian Fiction (University of Michigan Press, 2015) and Victorian Bestseller: The Life of Dinah Craik (University of Michigan Press, 2019).

Diane Jakacki

Statement of purpose:

My commitment to the TEI, and my interest in continuing to serve on the TEI Board of Directors, is rooted in my commitment to integrating TEI standards ever more thoroughly into pedagogical, training, and editorial and documentary research environments. I am particularly interested in working through the Board to support endeavours to create opportunities for the TEI to be adopted more widely by communities that can be daunted by the seeming complexities of the Guidelines and overwhelm of the assumed need to be able to code (I enjoy working with groups to prove that the feelings of dauntedness can be assuaged and in fact turned to great personal enjoyment!)

I truly value the time I spend on Board issues and believe it is the most gratifying and enjoyable service in which I am involved. I hope that I can continue to participate in ways that serve and extend the text encoding communities

Biography:

I am digital scholarship coordinator and associate faculty in Comparative & Digital Humanities at Bucknell University. My research focuses on digital humanities scholarship and pedagogy, early modern British literature and drama, critical making, digital scholarly production and publication.

I am lead of the REED London project, PI of the Mellon Foundation funded Liberal Arts Based Publishing Cooperative project and partner with CWRC in developing the LEAF virtual research environment. I am site tech lead for LEAF and a research contributor to the LINCS project, as well as co-PI (with James Cummings) of the NEH-AHRC funded Evolving Hands project.

I currently serve as Chair of the TEI Board of Directors and also as Chair of the Executive Board for ADHO.

I am the Fulbright Canada Research Chair in Digital Humanities (2022-3). I have published and presented broadly on DH and pedagogy, including co-edited volumes Early Modern Studies After the Digital Turn (ITER 2016), and What We Teach When We Teach DH (U Minnesota Press 2023).

Call for Communications Officer

Are you looking for a way to become more involved in the Text Encoding Initiative Consortium’s (TEI-C) community? Do you have basic communications IT skills that you could share?

We’re looking for a Communications Officer to run the TEI-C’s online presence. This is a two-year post, from March 2023 to March 2025, and open to renewal.

As Communications Officer, you will:

  • Promote activities, events, and news related to TEI on its social media and website
  • Assist with Web-archiving, for example conference websites
  • Actively manage the TEI-C’s social media presence (e.g. Twitter/Facebook/Mastodon)
  • Report (quarterly or as needed) in the TEI-C Board and Infrastructure Group meetings

Our website is currently being redesigned and restructured. The Communication Officer will collaborate in this effort. They will help to keep the site up to date.

The average time commitment is 1 – 2 hours per week. The TEI-C will pay a small annual stipend of 2,500 USD for this work and provide travel and accommodation to the annual TEI conference.

We’re looking for someone:

  • With social media experience
  • With experience working with WordPress
  • Who is responsive and happy to work as part of a team

Like other members of the Board and Technical Council, you will receive financial support to participate in the annual TEI-C conference.

The TEI-C is committed to diversity and inclusion, and ensures equal opportunity to all qualified individuals. We invite applications from all including those with diverse needs, backgrounds, and abilities. Applicants need not be current members of the TEI-C, but clear understanding of the Text Encoding Initiative Consortium, TEI standards, and community are highly important.

If you are interested in this position please send a short CV and motivation statement (no more than 1-2 pages) to the Board of Directors (board@tei-c.org) by 28 February 2023.

If you’d like more information about the post, please contact:
Diane Jakacki, Chair of the Board: chair@tei-c.org

TEI-C Elections 2022

Introduction

In 2022, TEI Members will hold an election to fill 3 open positions on the TEI Technical Council (3-year term). There is 1 open position on the TEI Board of Directors (3-year term) and 1 candidate for that position, therefore Constance Crompton will be elected by default.

The following persons have been nominated and have agreed to stand as candidates for election to the TEI Technical Council and the TEI Board. They have all supplied a statement covering two aspects:

  1. a candidate statement in which they discuss their reasons for wishing to serve on the Board or Technical Council and what their particular goals would be.
  2. a biographical description focusing on their education, training, research, etc., relevant to the TEI.

A Note on Voting

Voting will be conducted via the OpaVote website, which uses the open-source balloting software OpenSTV for tabulation. OpenSTV is a widely used open-source Single Transferable Vote program.

TEI Member voters, identified by email address, will receive a URL at which to cast their ballots. Upon closing of the election, all voters who cast a vote will be sent an email with a link to the results of the election, from which it is also possible to download the actual final ballots for verification. Individual members may vote in the TEI Technical Council elections. The nominated representative of institutions with membership may vote for both the TEI Board and TEI Technical Council.

Voting will open on August 29th.

Voting closes on September 14, 2022 at 23:59 British Summer Time (BST).

Candidate Statements: TEI Technical Council

Helena Bermúdez Sabel (University of Neuchâtel)

Statement of purpose:

I have just served a term on the TEI Technical Council and I would love to continue the work carried out during these enriching two years. I have acquired experience in core TEI-C tasks such as managing Guidelines releases and contributing to issue resolution concerning the enhancement of the Guidelines (besides bug fixing, I had the opportunity to work on the creation of new elements, like the ongoing work regarding a <gender> element). I have contributed to the maintenance of the TEI-C Stylesheets, and I have recently taken over the chair of the Stylesheets Group, a responsibility I will like to keep assuming, if elected.

One of my interests lies in further employing the TEI to model less common applications, such as graph-based annotations of complex linguistic features like syntactic analysis and semantic ambiguity. With this goal in mind, I am currently involved in the development of automatic converters from the most common formats used by natural language processing tools to TEI, and from TEI to RDF serialization formats. I believe that these activities can promote fruitful dialogue between different research communities.

Biography:

I am a postdoctoral researcher at the Université de Neuchâtel (Switzerland) working for the SNF-funded project “A world of possibilities. Modal pathways over an extra-long period of time: the diachrony of modality in the Latin language” (https://woposs.unine.ch). In this project, I am responsible for the technical aspects of the annotation workflow, including the automation of corpus pre- and post-processing. The pipeline makes ample use of XML technologies and it includes a search interface of TEI-encoded documents that contain multiple layers of linguistic annotation.

I hold a PhD in Medieval Studies from the Universidade de Santiago de Compostela (2019). My doctoral research involved the development of a digital edition model in TEI that enables the quantitative study of linguistic variation through the automatic comparison of witnesses. An implementation of the model was illustrated with a Galician-Portuguese secular poetry corpus (http://www.gl-pt.obdurodon.org). I am particularly interested in the development of multifunctional palaeographic editions (e.g.: https://helenasabel.github.io/DIGA/).

I also have solid experience in Digital Humanities teaching. Besides the specialized workshops in digital philology I have taught in different institutions, I am a regular instructor of the Master in Digital Humanities at Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED, Spain) in which, among other subjects, I teach a course focused on XSLT.

I am proficient in XML technologies and linked data. I am interested in data modeling and the formalization of annotation schemes, thus I am very keen on continuing to have an active role in the TEI community.

Elli Bleeker (Huygens Institute for History and Culture of the Netherlands)

Statement of purpose:

After years of being a user of the TEI Guidelines for text encoding and digital edition projects, it has been a truly great and very informative experience to get to know “the other side” of the TEI and to collaborate with the brilliant and devoted people of the Technical Council on developing, maintaining, and improving the Guidelines and the Stylesheets. My first 8 months on Council have flown by and I’m eager to continue to play a part the important international project that is the TEI.

I would therefore be honoured and very happy to be re-elected and to be able to go on with my work. In addition to the valuable everyday efforts of keeping the Guidelines and Stylesheets up-to-date, I will endeavour to reevaluate the encoding recommendations for manuscripts from a genetic point of view (see “An Encoding Model for Genetic Editions” by Lou Burnard et al., 2010). Using my experience with encoding modern manuscripts and creating digital genetic editions, I will examine potential areas for development or improvement of these recommentations, such as the encoding of nonlinear text and the sequentiality of textual revisions. And last but definitely not least, I will devote considerable time to the educational aspect of the TEI by contributing to documentation and tutorials that lower the threshold for new TEI users. This includes – but is not limited to – designing editorial workflows for the creation of straightforward digital editions of modern manuscripts. Accordingly, I hope to be able to give back to the lively, intellectual, and welcoming scholarly community of the TEI.

Biography:

I am a researcher at the Huygens Institute for the History and Culture of the Netherlands, an institute that specialises in the scholarly editing of literary and historical documents. My field of studies are digital scholarly editing and computational textual scholarship, with a focus on the genetic editing of modern manuscripts. In my doctoral research at the Centre for Manuscript Genetics in Antwerp (BE) I studied the role of the scholarly editor in the digital environment. During this period, I was fortunate to be an Early Career Research Fellow in the Marie Sklodowska-Curie funded network DiXiT (2013–2017). Within this network, I received advanced training in manuscript studies, text modeling, and XML technologies for text analysis, publishing, and processing.

Currently, I am PI of the COLLaiTE project, which examines how TEI markup can be leveraged to improve the automated collation; initiator of the “Companion for Digital Editing Methods” project, which develops an online platform for knowledge exchange on digital editing; and supervisor of the eDITem project, which sets out to develop TEI templates for digital editions. Each of these projects inform to a large extent my work on Council and, in return, are shaped by my experience as a Council member.

Nicholas Cole (Pembroke College, University of Oxford)

Statement of purpose:

I wish to serve on the council to improve the tooling and infrastructure that supports the TEI, as well as to contribute to the evolution of the standard. I have a particular interest in the ATOP project being undertaken by the stylesheets team.

I have a good knowledge of the TEI repositories and the technical skills necessary to contribute to the incremental fixing of bugs and the implementation of enhancements required by the TEI community. I also have the technical skills and experience necessary to enhance the underlying infrastructure of the TEI.

More generally, I am keen to see the TEI be at the forefront of efforts for inclusivity in scholarship — especially those whose needs include screen-readers or other adaptions for the disabled.

I currently work with text-focused projects that span multiple languages and involve working with more than 24 students at any one time based at 5 different institutions, including open-enrolment institutions and students from non-traditional backgrounds. I believe that the right technical standards and tooling are the key to building an inclusive research community.

In my broader academic work, I am interested in the creation of workflows that speed documentary editing processes and in the automatic conversion of TEI to and from other formats for the purpose of editing and analysis. I am interested in extending the TEI specification to capture the features of the specific kinds of material that we encounter during our work on negotiations and legislative histories.

If elected I will serve on the council with energy and commitment.

Biography:

I am currently a Senior Research Fellow at Pembroke College Oxford, where I am the PI of the Quill Project, which studies the creation and evolution of constitutional law in America and elsewhere through processes of negotiation. Details of the project can be found at www.quill.pmb.ox.ac.uk.

Though I began my academic career in more traditional fields, with a background in ancient and modern political thought, my interests over the last 8 years have been focused on advancing DH techniques as a way to drive a more thorough understanding of constitutional history and democratic institutions. This research includes working with the whole of the data life-cycle from paper archive to dissemination, and of course accurate and useful digital editions of text.

I have previously served a one-year term on the Technical Council and would be honoured to serve again. I believe strongly in the mission of the TEI and in the strength of its community.

Nick Laiacona (Performant Software Solutions)

Statement of purpose:

In the process of writing FairCopy, I developed an ODD parser that interprets the TEI Guidelines programmatically into a set of rules that drive the logic of a word processor. FairCopy supports 90% of the elements in TEI and so I became very familiar with the TEI’s internal structure. The TEI is a remarkable piece of intellectual work and it would be my pleasure to aid in its continued maintenance and development.

If elected to the TEI Technical Council, I will bring my technical skills and experience to the challenges and opportunities facing the TEI today. I am specifically interested in ongoing localization efforts, and providing uniform translation coverage to the entire element and attribute set. As an active member of the IIIF community, I would like to help develop best practices of using TEI with IIIF. I am also a fan of static site generation and minimal computing. These are areas that TEI can really see more widespread use and adoption. I recognize the technical challenges of working with a 30+ year old code base and would like to help modernize systems where possible.

Biography:

In 2006, I founded Performant Software Solutions, a software development firm specializing in the Digital Humanities. Since then, we have grown to a team of 10 developers, designers and DH software project experts working with dozens of clients at universities throughout North America and Europe. We work on open source software projects funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the National Science Foundation. Performant routinely makes use of standards such as TEI, IIIF, and RDF in our projects.

Some of the software I have developed include: Juxta, Digital Mappa, TextLab, and most recently: FairCopy. I participated in the “Open Scholarly Communities on the Web” and “Interedition” COST Actions and I speak regularly at conferences such as the Digital Humanities conference, IIIF Conference, the Modern Language Association, and others.

David Maus (State and University Library Hamburg)

Statement of purpose:

I feel honored to have been nominated as a candidate for the TEI Technical Council. If elected I will focus on maintaining and future-proofing the TEI infrastructure. I see this challenge as a technical and a social issue: It means using as well as discussing and teaching modern markup technologies and agile development practices with and to fellow angle bracket wranglers.

I’m happy to contribute my time and experience with markup technologies as well as with organizing (academic) software development projects.

Biography:

I’m head of research of development at the State and University Library Hamburg. As part of my work I act as liaison to digital humanities research at the University of Hamburg and other higher education institutions. I am currently deeply involved as information architect and XML programmer in Dehmel Digital, a digital scholarly edition that uses machine-learning technologies to provide access to the correspondence of Richard and Ida Dehmel, a famous artist couple from around 1900. I’m the author of SchXslt, a modern implementation of the Schematron validation language for structured documents and serve on the program committee of the MarkupUK conference.

Patricia O Connor (University of Oxford/University of Newcastle)

Statement of purpose:

I have been the TEI Communications Officer since 2021 and during this time I have endeavoured to share multilingual social media posts on behalf of the TEI. This online dissemination is only possible thanks to the hard work of the TEI Working Group on Internationalisation and I would welcome the opportunity to continue highlighting the internationalisation of the TEI Guidelines and specifications as a member of the Technical Council.

With a background in literary studies, the TEI Guidelines were (and still are) an important resource for informing my research on the representation of primary sources and I am committed to ensuring that the TEI introductory materials remain accessible for users that are encountering the TEI for the first time. My TEI experience encompasses medieval and modern manuscripts, and I am especially interested in discussing the encoding and digital representation of marginalia-bearing manuscripts. My research equally highlights the importance of Linked Open Data and advocates for the development of interoperable and sustainable resources, and I am enthusiastic about working with more experienced TEI Council mentors to acquire a practical understanding of these principles in relation to the TEI.

From 2019 to 2021 I was technical writer and beta-tester, during which time I gained valuable experience in revising and updating documentation, responding to ticket requests, testing new or existing features, as well as reporting and resolving issues. I believe this experience equips me to fulfil the duties of this position and I would be delighted to have the opportunity to actively contribute to the development of the TEI by serving on the TEI Technical Council.

Biography:

Currently, I am a research assistant for the ERC-funded project “A Consolidated Library of Anglo-Saxon Poetry” (CLASP) at the Faculty of English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford. From October 2022, I will be working as a research assistant as part of the “Transatlantic Intellectual Networks” project at Newcastle University for which I will be transcribing, editing, and encoding 19th century correspondence material in TEI-XML.

I completed a PhD in Digital Humanities at University College Cork in 2020. My doctoral research involved encoding the Old English and Latin marginalia of an early-eleventh-century manuscript in TEI-XML and focused on the representation of textual additions in digital scholarly editions.

I am committed to developing my knowledge of TEI, I have completed introductory courses on Linked Open Data and XSLT at the XML Summer School at Oxford University (2018) and I have received in-depth training in text encoding and manuscript studies at the Medieval and Modern Manuscript Studies in the Digital Age Summer School at Cambridge University Library (CUL) and King’s College London (2016). Since 2021, I have had the honour of promoting the development of the TEI standard online as the Communications Officer for the TEI Consortium.

Joey Takeda (Digital Humanities Innovation Lab, Simon Fraser University)

Statement of purpose:

In standing for election, I hope to formalize my commitment to the TEI and continue to contribute to the development of the TEI ecosystem. I have worked closely with the TEI Guidelines and Stylesheets both in my own research and as a technical developer for numerous projects and I understand the complexity of the TEI’s technical infrastructure. While the TEI Guidelines have and continue to be essential for digital textual scholarship, there are potential barriers—technical, infrastructural, and methodological—that can make it difficult for communities to see how the TEI can be used in their own projects. If elected, I aim to work on improving the overall accessibility of the TEI Guidelines to make finding and searching for information easier and more intuitive. I also aim to make visible the many methods available for contributing to the development of the TEI and encourage potential contributors to bring their expertise to bear on the Guidelines regardless of technical expertise, academic position, or institutional affiliation.

Alongside my technical expertise and training in XML technologies and front-end web development, I hope to contribute to the Council my experience as a researcher of racialized, diasporic, and Indigenous literatures. I am committed to encouraging the complex and difficult questions that arise from engaging multiple communities regarding the nature of text, text encoding, and preservation. I would be honoured to have the opportunity to contribute meaningfully to the continued development of the TEI and to assist in providing robust and sustainable approaches that reflect and respond to the array of users, researchers, and texts that make up the TEI community.

Biography:

I am currently a Developer at the Digital Humanities Innovation Lab at Simon Fraser University, specializing in text encoding and digital editions. I also serve as a Technical Director for the Winnifred Eaton Archive, a member of the TEI by Example’s International Advisory Board, and the co-developer (with Martin Holmes) of staticSearch (https://github.com/projectEndings/staticSearch). I hold an MA in English Literature from the University of British Columbia and a BA Honours in English Literature and Gender Studies from the University of Victoria. My research focused primarily on digital humanities, textual encoding, and Indigenous and diasporic literatures, particularly Asian American and Asian Canadian literature across the twentieth century.

I have worked as an encoder, developer, and designer for multiple TEI projects, including The Map of Early Modern London, Linked Early Modern Drama Online, and Landscapes of Injustice. At SFU, I regularly give workshops and guest lectures on text encoding, TEI, digital editions, and minimal computing. My most recent work has been with the the Lyon in Mourning project and the development of workflows and mechanisms for aligning TEI encoded editions with the XML produced by HTR software as well as with the IIIF standard.

Candidate Statements: TEI Board

Constance Crompton (University of Ottawa)

Statement of purpose:

I am delighted to be nominated to stand for election to the TEI Board of Directors. I’ve been involved in several TEI encoding projects since 2007, including The Yellow Nineties Online, The Social Edition of the Devonshire Manuscript, and, most recently, the Lesbian and Gay Liberation in Canada project (which I co-direct with Michelle Schwartz of Toronto Metropolitan University). As part of the Linked Infrastructure for Networked Cultural Scholarship I am developing workflows to convert TEI to CIDOC-CRM. In the last decade I have team-taught the TEI at the Digital Humanities Summer Institute in Victoria and other institutes in North America. I also teach textual editing via TEI at the University of Ottawa.

I have a keen interest in:

  • further developing of prosopographic best practice
  • creating crosswalks between TEI and other formats, including linked data
  • engaging in institutional outreach and increasing TEI membership

Biography:

I am a Canada Research Chair in Digital Humanities at the University of Ottawa, and former Vice-President of the Canadian Society for Digital Humanities/Société canadienne des humanités numériques. I direct the University of Ottawa’s Labo de Données en Sciences Humaines/Humanities Data Lab, which is located on unceeded Anishinabe land.

CFP TEI 2021: Next Gen TEI

At DH 2017 in Montreal, the Text Encoding Initiative received the Antonio Zampolli Prize in recognition of our thirtieth anniversary. Four years and a pandemic later, the TEI Guidelines remain a significant part of the digital humanities toolkit, with a strong focus on internationalization, both linguistic and geographic. From Japan to Argentina, Austria to Cameroon, we can cite multiple examples of workshops, graduate programs, and community-driven activities focused on the TEI Guidelines and their use.

Theme: Next Gen TEI

This year, the TEI-C will hold a shorter virtual version of our usual conference as our extended global community begins to recover from the pandemic. We wish to feature a forward-looking program, one that will help frame the next thirty years of the TEI.

Since we were unable to hold a conference in 2020, we feel a need to do so this year. At the same time, our members’ ability to travel is likely to remain restricted for the rest of 2021. Thus we have resolved to organize a virtual conference.

We invite submissions for presentations that consider any aspect of text encoding, with especial encouragement for submissions that address issues related to text encoding in international contexts, linguistic, cultural, and geographic. Abstracts may be submitted by individuals or groups; they should be no more than 300 words in length; they should outline the approach, challenge, and/or context in which text encoding is being applied; proposals may reflect upon subjects that are project-driven or methodological in nature.

Abstracts should be submitted via ConfTool: https://www.conftool.pro/tei2021 beginning immediately. Deadline for submissions is 31 July.

Authors should anticipate that accepted work will be presented synchronously in a telecommunications conference format (concurrent sessions conducted in Zoom or similar software) on Monday, 25 October, and on Wednesday, 27 October.

We realize that virtual conferences have certain limitations and present a variety of challenges. We will therefore make accepted presentations available on Zenodo between 15 and 25 October. We will also organize a social poster session in gather.town. More information about both opportunities will be forthcoming, and can be found on the conference web page: https://tei-c.org/next-gen-tei-2021/.

Best regards,

The TEI 2021 Program Committee