Symposium 2013
Welcome Address
Introduction: EGO | European History Online – Aims and Implementation. An Interim Review
Section 1: Multi-Inter-Trans-Disciplinarity
What specific perspectives are introduced to EGO by the individual historical disciplines? In what ways do the participating disciplines profit from the concept of the transferts culturels on which EGO is based? How do these disciplines work together scientifically – is EGO a transdisciplinary, an interdisciplinary or a multidisciplinary project?
Section 2: Multi-Inter-Trans-Nationality
In what ways does the editors' national background influence the selection of topics and authors? What are the prospects and limits of the programmatic bilingual range of EGO? How do (non-)English native speakers receive the translation of German-language articles? Are there any conceivable alternatives to the concept of "translation"?
Section 3: Multi-Inter-Trans-Mediality
How do scientific texts and illustrations, audio and video elements in EGO relate to each other? In which contexts do multimedia elements illustrate the text, in which contexts do they add to the text's line of argument? Which disciplines and scientific institutions profit particularly from the multimedial linkage of EGO-articles? Do internal links to other EGO-articles improve the visibility of communicative "nodal points" of European history which have been neglected so far?
Citation
Berger, Joachim (ed.): EGO | European History Online: Aims and Implementation, Mainz 2013-12-15. URL: http://ieg-ego.eu/symposium-2013-en URN: urn:nbn:de:0159-2015062217.