Post 8: Bibliography
Antrim, Zayde, ‘Nostalgia for the Future: A Comparison between the Introductions to Ibn ʿAsākir’s Taʾrīkh Madīnat Dimashq and al-Khaṭīb al-Baghdādī’s Taʾrīkh...
Our studies of subgenres and network analysis alongside other dedicated research are helping us understand scholarly networks.
To see examples of how we are studying scholarly networks, check out some relevant blog posts:
Antrim, Zayde, ‘Nostalgia for the Future: A Comparison between the Introductions to Ibn ʿAsākir’s Taʾrīkh Madīnat Dimashq and al-Khaṭīb al-Baghdādī’s Taʾrīkh...
Image yourself as a learned bookseller of the twelfth century. You have just been called in to assess the estate of a wealthy, prominent scholar who has died...
As noted in the last post, we struggled to verify book citations in the TMD, both within and outside of isnāds. We believe that our struggles reflect the cha...
We continue our investigation of Ibn ʿAsākir’s citations to address our third question about his working methods. When author names appear within his isnāds,...
Our previous blog post featured a deep dive into the pool of informants whom Ibn ʿAsākir cites frequently. Now we turn to the big picture of how he says he a...
Ibn ʿAsākir names many persons from whom he acquired information for the TMD. What can our data tell us about them?
Digital humanists often say they would like to read more work in progress. Our blog posts represent such work. We worked intensively over months to create an...
The OpenITI corpus contains more than 11,000 works and now exceeds 2 billion words in size. Many of the corpus’s works are extraordinarily large, surpassing ...
Quantitative and macroanalytic approaches
One of the major challenges for those working with historical Arabic texts lies in names, and in the variety of ways that authors might refer to the same per...