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<!-- DIGITHUM 10 -->
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  <title>DIGITHUM. Humanities in the digital age</title>
  <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/</link>
  <description>DIGITHUM is an electronic journal produced by the UOC Faculty of Humanities and Faculty of Languages and Cultures</description>
  <generator>UOC</generator>
  <language>en-GB</language>
  <copyright>The texts published in this journal are subject to a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-NoDerivativeWorks 2.5 Spain licence.</copyright>
  <managingEditor>UOC</managingEditor>
  <webMaster>UOC</webMaster>

  <item>
   	 <title>Editorial</title>
	   <description>Digithum reaches its tenth issue and this is worth highlighting given what it means for the consolidation of the project and the confirmation of its relevance and viability. The journal reaches this landmark, which we hope will be the first of many, immersed in a process of continuous improvement that has seen it indexed in the most demanding journal directories. Blind review by two peers in all cases, and the series of formal and management requirements mean that it has been included in the leading indices and is increasingly well respected.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/eng/editorial.html</link>
	   <author>Narcís Figueras (UOC)</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
   </item>
  
  
  <item>
   	 <title>The CLARIN project: a scientific research infrastructure for the humanities and social sciences</title>
	   <description>This article presents the CLARIN (Common Language Resources and Technologies) project, a large-scale pan-European collaborative project that aims to promote the use of technological tools in research in the fields of the humanities and social sciences.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/dt/eng/bel_espeja_marimon_villegas.html</link>
	   <author>Núria Bel, Santiago Bel, Sergio Espeja, Montserrat Marimon, Marta Villegas</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
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   <item>
	   <title>Web 2.0 as a dystopia in the recent internet</title>
	   <description>The term Web 2.0 has recently come to form part of the vocabulary associated with the internet. Semantically imprecise, it looks to capture a moment in the development of the internet where the user becomes the central catalyst with a greater capacity for expression, interaction and participation provided by certain recently developed technologies.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/dt/eng/cambra.html</link>
	   <author>Toni Cambra</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
   </item>
   
   <item>
	   <title>Ancestral cultures in modern universes</title>
	   <description>This article offers an introductory look at the conservation and dissemination of indigenous South American culture in digital spaces and social networks. It briefly analyses the presence of native South American societies in the web universe, detailing some of the tools used, the contents presented, the characteristics of the proposals and the motivations.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/dt/eng/civallero.html</link>
	   <author>Edgardo Civallero</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
   </item>
   
   <item>
	   <title>Automatic semantic role labelling using a memory-based learning system</title>
	   <description>Automatic semantic role labelling using a memory-based learning system.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/dt/eng/morante.html</link>
	   <author>Roser Morante</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
   </item> 
   
   <item>
	   <title>Orientalism: thirty years on. Introduction</title>
	   <description>This dossier contains a series of articles inspired by Edward Said's concept of Orientalism. Together, the articles in the dossier show the importance of Said's contribution and defend the need to continue working to make it even more important and valid, both in the academic context and in terms of the social diffusion it deserves.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/dt/eng/orientalisme.html</link>
	   <author>Carles Prado-Fonts</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
   </item>
		
   <item>
	   <title>The Western Representation of Modern China: Orientalism, Culturalism and Historiographical Criticism</title>
	   <description>The West's perception of China as a historical entity has evolved over the centuries. China has gone from a country of miracles and marvels in the medieval world and a refined and erudite culture in early modern Europe, to become a nation without history or progress since the Enlightenment of the late 18th and early 19th centuries.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/dt/eng/martinez.html</link>
	   <author>David Martínez-Robles</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
   </item>

	 <item>
	   <title>Instrumentalisation of Passions, Social Regulation and Transcendence of Power in the Hanfeizi</title>
	   <description>Basic aim of this article is to present, albeit it schematically, some of the fundamental elements upon which the political and philosophical proposal of the Hanfeizi, one of the most important texts of pre-Imperial China, is based.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/dt/eng/galvany.html</link>
	   <author>Albert Galvany</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
   </item>
   
   <item>
	   <title>On Monkeys and Japanese: Mimicry and Anastrophe in Orientalist Representation</title>
	   <description>A number of lines of work are presented from a current project into the implications of Orientalism in the stereotypical representation of Japan through the analysis of the discourses of the paradox and inverse civilisation, and the consideration of the animalisation strategies of the Other in the travel literature of Pierre Loti and the fiction of Pierre Boulle.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/dt/eng/guarne.html</link>
	   <author>Blai Guarné</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
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   <item>
	   <title>Against Besieged Literature: Fictions, Obsessions and Globalisations of Chinese Literature</title>
	   <description>Chinese literature in the 20th century has seen how the combination between, on one hand, the canon established by Socialist realism in China and, on the other, the approaches of Area Studies in the West imposed a limited vision and a partial and slanted assessment of its complexity.</description>
	   <link>http://digithum.uoc.edu/10/dt/eng/prado.html</link>
	   <author>Carles Prado-Fonts</author>
	   <source url="http://digithum.uoc.edu/eng/rss.xml"></source>
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