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The series "Digital History and Hermeneutics" addresses key questions for historians in the digital age: - how do digital infrastructures and technologies interfere in our practices of thinking, doing, and narrating history? - what are the methodological and epistemological implications of using digital data and tools for historical interpretation and argumentation? - what new historical questions can be asked when exploring the big data of the past? In offering a platform for cutting edge scholarship in the emerging field of digital history and hermeneutics, the series aims at making a critical intervention in the field of digital humanities and introducing key debates and concepts of digital history to the historical community at large.
Digital humanities. --- Hermeneutics. --- Interpretation, Methodology of --- Criticism --- Humanities
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Nineteen authors from nine countries analyze reports of travels to the Ottoman Empire between the fifteenth and the nineteenth centuries. The volume discusses questions of perceptions of "otherness", the circulation of knowledge, intermedial relations, gender roles, and explores possibilities and limits of digital analysis.
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