User:GabrielBodard

Bio
Gabriel Bodard is trained as a classicist, with training and experience in both papyrology and epigraphy as part of his doctoral research. As well as extensive teaching experience in both Classics and computer skills, his first employment after leaving University was at the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae at the University of California, one of the first major Humanities Computing projects dealing with Classical texts (and one that shared a lot of technologies and practices with the Duke Databank of Documentary Papyri and Cornell Greek Epigraphy (PHI), of similar pedigree). He has been an editor on the Suda Online project since its inception in 1998. Since then he has built upon his experience in text encoding and markup with work on various digital projects in London, especially the Inscriptions of Aphrodisias (of which he is co-author), Inscriptions of Roman Tripolitania and Cyrenaica, and now the Ancient Inscriptions of the Northern Black Sea. In the process of working on these projects at the Department of Digital Humanities at King's College London he has acquired broad and in-depth knowledge of text encoding and processing, especially the use of TEI XML. He is on the Technical Council of the TEI, an academic group that advises and makes decisions on guidelines and other technical development issues. He founded the Digital Classicist, a community of expertise in the application of Digital Humanities to the study of the ancient world, and is an administrator of the Stoa weblog. He was for 6 years on the steering committee of the British Epigraphy Society, and has been involved in many training events for digital epigraphy and papyrology. He has also organised and taught several formal EpiDoc Summer Schools over the past several years. He was the principal investigator on the KCL team subcontracted by Duke under the Andrew W. Mellon-funded Integrating Digital Papyrology project (2007-2008) to convert the DDbDP and other papyrological materials into EpiDoc XML, bringing his experience of both epigraphic markup in XML and the use of conversion tools, and overseeing the building of open source software to crosswalk from DDbDP's legacy format to validating TEI XML, and was a consultant on the second and third phases of the IDP project.

Contact

 * Centre for Computing in the Humanities
 * King's College London
 * 26-29 Drury Lane
 * London WC2B 5RL


 * Email: gabriel.bodard -at- kcl.ac.uk

Projects

 * Research Associate and Co-Investigator, Inscriptiones antiquae Orae Septentrionalis Ponti Euxini, 2011-2016

Online Presentations

 * Open Source and Open Access (UCL Department of Information Science, 2010-2013)
 * A View on Digital Classics Collaboration: from a cacophony of epigraphic databases to a citizens’ web of inscriptions (plenary seminar, Berlin, Tuesday, 23 October 2012) (video)
 * Interview with Classics Confidential (video)
 * Scholarly Publishing and Web 2.0 (MA in Digital Humanities, October 25, 2010)
 * Integrating Digital Papyrology (British Museum, September 4, 2010)
 * Digital Epigraphy, Interoperability and Linked Data on the Web (Brown University, May 8, 2008)
 * Epigraphic Interoperability (British School at Rome, February 28, 2008)
 * Epigrapher as Encoder (International Congress of Greek and Latin Epigraphy, Oxford, September 6, 2007)
 * Collaborative Text Editing (on-demand video) (e-Science Institute, Edinburgh, June 20, 2007)
 * Markup for Open Source Critical Editions (Methods Network workgroup/workshop, King's College London, September 22, 2006)

Activities

 * Current member of the Technical Council of the Text Encoding Initiative (2007-2013)
 * Former member of the steering committee of the British Epigraphy Society (2005-2012)
 * Founder editor of the Digital Classicist community, promoting collaboration between computer science and the study of the ancient world. Administrator and editor of the Stoa Consortium weblog.
 * Organised Digital Classicist Summer seminar series at the Institute of Classical Studies (2006-2012), and panels at various conferences (Classical Association 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011; Digital Research in the Humanities and Arts, 2008; Digital Humanities, 2009, 2011; American Philological Association, 2010)
 * One of the architects of the EpiDoc Collaborative, schema and guidelines for the encoding of ancient epigraphic and papyroological documents in XML
 * Technical Observer on the Pleiades Project, providing geographical information on the ancient world
 * Co-organiser of the Open Source Critical Editions workshop, sponsored by the Methods Network (September 2006)

Previous projects include

 * Consultant, Integrating Digital Papyrology, 2008-11.
 * Research Associate and co-author, Inscriptions of Roman Cyrenaica, 2007-12.
 * Research Associate, Supporting Productive Queries for Research (SPQR), 2010-11.
 * Researcher, Authorship Attribution for Lysiac Corpus, 2010.
 * Domain researcher, Linking and Querying Ancient Texts (LaQuAT), 2008-9.
 * Domain researcher, gMan, 2010.
 * Technical Lead, Concordia, 2008-9.
 * Principal Investigator, DDH subcontract, Integrating Digital Papyrology, 2007-8.
 * Research Associate and co-author, Inscriptions of Aphrodisias, 2004-7.
 * Research Assistant and technical adviser on the Imagines Italicae project, Institute of Classical Studies (2003-2004)
 * Research Assistant on the Liber Vitae Dunelmensis project (2003-2004)
 * Research Associate on the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae, University of California, Irvine (2000-2001)
 * XML and XSLT work with the DDH research Team
 * Has also taught Greek language and literature at several colleges both in London and elsewhere.