Lecture Series: Winter Semester 2023-24

Digital Humanities in Focus: Methods, Applications, and Perspectives

Semester Program 2023-24

The lecture series took place regularly on Mondays during the lecture period from 5:15 to 6:45 p.m. The course venue was in person at the main building of the university, located at Universitätsplatz 1, in Room 104 (on the 1st floor), and online via Zoom.

Lectures

Erzählforschung und Netzwerkanalyse am Beispiel der Hexensagen Mecklenburgs

Abstract:

In der Zettelsammlung von Richard Wossidlo (1859–1939) gibt es sieben Kästen mit Hexensa­gen zu verschiedenen Themen, z.B.: Wie erkenne ich eine Hexe? Abwehr von Hexen, Butter- und Milchdiebstahl, Krankheiten durch Hexen an Mensch und Tier, Blocksbergfahrt, Verwand­lung von Hexen in Tiere. Insgesamt sind es Hunderte Hexensagen, die Wossidlo auf seinen Feldforschungen in Mecklenburg gesammelt oder durch sein Korrespondentennetzwerk per Brief erhalten hat. Möchte man nun die Hexensagen inhaltlich oder nach Erzählorten oder Er­zählern untersuchen, müsste man Zettel für Zettel durchgehen und bekommt nur schwer einen gesamten Überblick. Hier hilft dem Erzählforscher die quantitative Analyse der Metadaten (Er­zählort, Erzähler, Informant, Datum der Erzählung, Keywords) mittels Graph Mining. Durch die Übersichtsgraphen lassen sich auf einen Blick Netzwerke von Erzählern, die Ortsverteilung oder die quantitative Verteilung der Erzählinhalte (Motive) erkennen.

Short bios:

Dr. Petra Himstedt-Vaid studied Balkanology and French Philology at the Free University of Berlin and earned her Ph.D. in Southeast European Studies at the University of Jena with a contribution to European narrative research. In addition to her research, she has worked as an editor for scholarly journals and is a co-editor of the Journal for Balkanology. From 2018 to February 2021, Petra Himstedt-Vaid was a research fellow in the transatlantic project ISEBEL (Intelligent Search Engine for Belief Legends) as part of the Digging into Data Challenge, collaborating with the Meertens Institute (Amsterdam) and the UCLA (Los Angeles), later the University of California (Berkeley) at the Wossidlo Research Center. Since April 2022, she has been heading the Wossidlo Research Center for European Ethnology/Folklore.

Dr. Holger Meyer studied Automation Engineering and Technical Cybernetics at the University of Rostock and earned his Ph.D. in computer technology with a focus on real-time database systems. Currently, he is the acting head of the Chair of Database and Information Systems. Holger Meyer teaches and conducts research in the areas of databases, query processing, and transaction support. In the context of national and international cooperation projects, the development of graph mining methods is at the forefront of his scientific interest. These methods are primarily applied in Digital Humanities, specifically in narrative research.


Contact

Digital Humanities
Institute for German Studies
Gertrudenstraße 11, Torhaus
18057 Rostock

E-Mail: phf.dhuni-rostockde

Lecture Series:

Digital Humanities in Focus

Zoom-Link
Meeting ID: 630 4747 2241
Passcode: 430211

Venue in the SuSe 2024
Main Building of the University
Universitätsplatz 1, 2nd Floor,
Room 218
18055 Rostock

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