Digital Humanities Research ›› 2025, Vol. 5 ›› Issue (2): 123-128.
Previous Articles
Online:
Published:
Abstract:
On March 9,2025,the symposium on "digital Confucian Classics" was held in Renmin University of China. It was the first in-depth discussion on the development direction of digital Confucian classics studies. Participants engaged in cross-disciplinary dialogue on its connotation, positioning, goals, and development path, for reaching a consensus to advance this work, and outlining its tasks, potential forms, and challenges. It also featured multidisciplinary reflections on the existing digital platforms for ancient books, and proved the significance of constructing a specialized platform for digital Confucian classics studies. It further proposes some preliminary platform construction suggestions, and emphasize that platform design must always be consistent with the demands of humanities research.
Key words: Chinese classics , digital humanities , digitalization of ancient books , Confucian classics , AI
CLC Number:
G254-3
Fang Shuyi.
0 / / Recommend
Add to citation manager EndNote|Ris|BibTeX
URL: http://dhr.ruc.edu.cn/EN/
http://dhr.ruc.edu.cn/EN/Y2025/V5/I2/123
Digital Humanities and Digital Publishing: An Analytical Framework and Integration Mechanisms
From Manual to AI: Exploring History and Humanities in the Age of Artificial Intelligence-Workshop Summary
"Integration of Arts and Sciences: Digital Humanities in the Age of AGI”—A Review of the 6th China Digital Humanities Annual Conference (CDH2024)
Humanistic AI: Towards a New Field of Interdisciplinary Expertise and Research
From Still to Moving Images and Vice Versa: Analysing Technological Cycles and the Use of AI to Study Cinema History
Study on the Spatial and Temporal Distribution Structure of Evidence Chain in the Testimony Collection of Former Japanese Bacteriological Fighters from the Perspective of Knowledge Reorganization
The Scale of Time: Rereading and Rethinking A Companion to Digital Humanities
Quantitative Literary Research: Concepts, Traditions, and Paradigms
Digital Humanities in the Era of Digital Reproducibility Towards a Fairest and Post-computational Framework
Explicit or Implicit Digital Humanities? An Examination of Search Strategies to Retrieve Digital Humanities Publications from Large-scale Scholarly Databases
Digital Humanities: Mission Accomplished? An Analysis of Scholarly Literature