From c635fb62cf3efc69cc3cf729b6008d95080716b6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ludovic Moncla <moncla.ludovic@gmail.com> Date: Thu, 28 Sep 2023 20:57:53 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Update README.md --- "s\303\251minaires/session16_sep23/README.md" | 3 +++ 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+) diff --git "a/s\303\251minaires/session16_sep23/README.md" "b/s\303\251minaires/session16_sep23/README.md" index 1cf1362..f9790c6 100644 --- "a/s\303\251minaires/session16_sep23/README.md" +++ "b/s\303\251minaires/session16_sep23/README.md" @@ -15,4 +15,7 @@ Inscription : [https://framaforms.org/inscription-seminaire-septembre-2023-trait Ian Gregory (Lancaster University) and members of the [Space Time Narratives project](https://spacetimenarratives.github.io) +[<img src="https://geode.liris.cnrs.fr/seminaires-ixxi/session16_sep23/seminaire-session16.png" width="650" />](https://geode.liris.cnrs.fr/seminaires-ixxi/session16_sep23/seminaire-session16.mp4 "Enregistrement présentation") + + Previous approaches to understanding geographies in textual sources tend to focus on geoparsing to automatically identify place names and allocate them to coordinates. Such methods are highly quantitative and are limited to named places for which coordinates can be found, and have little concept of time. Yet, as narratives of journeys make abundantly clear, human experiences of geography are often subjective and more suited to qualitative representation. In these cases, "geography" is not limited to named places; rather, it incorporates the vague, imprecise, and ambiguous, with references to, for example, "the camp", or "the hills in the distance", and includes the relative locations using terms such as "near to", "on the left", "north of" or "a few hours’ journey from". \ No newline at end of file -- GitLab