
Course:
English 694 Computer-based Tools for Literary Research Fall 1999.

Web pages for Workshop on
The Use of Computer Corpora in Linguistics, North American Symposium
on Corpora in Linguistics and Language Teaching, University of Michigan,
20 May 1999.
Allen Renear (Brown University)and Jerome
McGann (University of Virginia) face off in
What is Text? A Debate on the
philosophical and epistemological nature of text in the light of
humanities computing research, organized by Susan Hockey, Thursday
10 June 1999 at
ACHALLC99.

Susan Hockey is a
Professor in the
Faculty of Arts and Director of the
Canadian Institute for
Research Computing in Arts (CIRCA) at the
University of Alberta, where she
also teaches humanities computing in the Department of English. Her
interests are in the development of better computing tools and
techniques to meet the needs of text-based scholarship in the humanities.

From 1991 to 1997 Susan
Hockey was the first Director of the
Center for Electronic Texts in
the Humanities (CETH), sponsored by Rutgers and Princeton
Universities and funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and
the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to act as a focus for electronic texts
in the humanities within the United States. At CETH she founded and
co-directed (with Dr Willard McCarty) an annual
International Summer Seminar on Methods and Tools for Electronic Texts
in the Humanities. She also directed a programme of research on the
use of the Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML) for the
Humanities including an interface to OpenText's Pat search engine, a
pilot project linking the Text Encoding Initiative and the Encoded
Archival Description SGML Document Type Definitions, and the Electronic
Theophrastus.

At
Oxford University Computing Services
from 1975 to 1991, Susan Hockey undertook various projects and roles.
She was Project Director for the
Oxford Concordance Program (OCP) for which she also wrote the user
manual, and Project Director for the first version of the manuscript
collation program
Collate. She taught courses on Text Analysis and the Computer, and
SNOBOL Programming for the Humanities. She was also the First Director
of the Computers in Teaching
Initiative Centre for Textual Studies and also directed the
Office for Humanities
Communication from 1989-91. She was elected to a Fellowship by
Special Election of St Cross College
in 1979 and an Emeritus Fellowship of the College in 1991.

Susan Hockey was Chair of
the Association for Literary and
Linguistic Computing from 1984-97. During that time she founded the
journal Literary and
Linguistic Computing with Oxford University Press and also co-edited
five volumes of the series Research in Humanities Computing for Oxford.
She has been a member of the Executive Committee of the
Text Encoding Initiative
since 1987 and has twice served as chair of that committee.

Her current research
activities include serving as Co-Chair (with Bernard Taylor) of the
Society of Biblical Literature
Seminar on Electronic Standards for Biblical Language Texts, as co-coordinator
(with David Chesnutt and C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen) and Chair of the
Steering Committee of the Model
Editions Partnership, and as co-investigator responsible for the
technical direction of the
Orlando Project.

Susan Hockey is the author
of A Guide to Computer Applications in the Humanities, Duckworth
and Johns Hopkins, 1980 and Snobol Programming for the Humanities,
Oxford University Press, 1986, as well as numerous articles on text
encoding, text analysis, and computing in the humanities.

Since 1985 Susan Hockey
has served on various Expert Groups, Advisory Boards and Task Forces
including:

Her other interests
include travel and hiking - she and her husband
Martin have trekked in Nepal and
hiked the Grand Canyon from rim to rim - also dressmaking, knitting and
needlecraft.

Last updated on 22
September 1999
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