Conférence internationale d'analyse de réseaux historiques (HNR2024)

La 9e conférence internationale d'analyse de réseaux historiques (Historical Network Research) a lieu du 8 au 10 juillet 2024 à l'Université de Lausanne et réunit des contributions d'une cinquantaine de chercheuses et chercheurs du monde entier.

Monday 8 July 2024 - 8h00 to Wednesday 10 July 2024 - 17h00

Synathlon 1216

Speaker(s): Martin Grandjean Université de Lausanne - Claire Lemercier SciencesPo Paris - Mathieu Jacomy University of Aalborg in Copenhagen - Marten Düring University of Luxembourg

La conférence Historical Network Research (HNR) est le rendez-vous annuel des chercheuses et chercheurs en analyse de réseaux historiques (histoire, histoire de l'art, sciences de l'antiquité). De l'analyse de relations sociales à l'étude de la circulation de lettres en passant par la généalogie, l'analyse structurelle d'organisations ou encore la mise en place de bases de données relationnelles, la notion de "réseau" est omniprésente dans les sciences historiques et sa formalisation au moyen des outils de la théorie des graphes ouvre de nouvelles perspectives méthodologiques.

Portée par la Historical Network Research Community (https://historicalnetworkresearch.org/), cette conférence rassemble pendant 3 jours 50 à 200 personnes (en présentiel et plus récemment partiellement hybride/en ligne), principalement d'Europe, autour de 30-50 communications évaluées par les pairs, 2-3 conférences plénières et une poignée d'ateliers autour d'outils ou de méthode.

Site web du colloque : https://historicalnetworkresearch.github.io/lausanne/ 

Programme : https://historicalnetworkresearch.github.io/lausanne/program/ 

Inscription (gratuite) : https://hnr2024.sciencesconf.org/

Le colloque est soutenu par la Section d'histoire de l'Université de Lausanne ainsi que par le Centre des sciences historiques de la culture (SHC) et l'Atelier des histoires.

Programme

Monday 8 July

Monday 8 July will consist of two workshops, followed by the opening plenary session. Registration for the workshops is independent of the conference: informations and registration here.

9:00-12:30 WORKSHOP 1

Visual Network Analysis

Mathieu Jacomy

14:00-17:30 WORKSHOP 2

Historical network analysis with nodegoat

Pim van Bree and Geert Kessels

18:00-19:30 PLENARY A

Opening keynote: “Irreductionist network visualization”

Mathieu Jacomy

Tuesday 9 July 

9:00-10:30 PLENARY B

Opening session 

Martin Grandjean

HNR Keynote 

Marten Düring

11:00-12:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS 

SESSION 1: Long papers 

Networks of Confessional Affiliation: Religious Choice and the Schism of Utrecht

Jaap Geraerts, Demival Vasques Filho

Emerging Maximilian: temporal co-occurrences network analysis of people mentioned in Regesta Imperii XIII

Marcella Tambuscio, Daniel Luger, Georg Vogeler

Inclusive institutions? Access to political power in the city of Tainan (Fort Zeelandia) in Dutch Formosa (1655-1662)

Maarten F. Van Dijck

SESSION 2: Long papers

Le marché foncier à Lausanne au 19e siècle. Mutations et réseaux des protagonistes.

Lucas Rappo

Communicating about communication: Using graph comics to explore communication networks in letters of Early Romanticism

Elena Suárez Cronauer, Aline Deicke, Laura Fath

Levantine Transitions. A Social Network Approach to Elite Formation in Urban Egypt, 1890-1914

Gert Huskens, Jan Vandersmissen, Christophe Verbruggen, Julie Birkholz

14:00-15:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS

SESSION 3: Long papers

Les réseaux urbains lyonnais pendant la guerre civile (1589-1594)

Graziella Gentet

‘Our Maist Speciall Freindis’: Using historical network analysis to study clan structures in early modern Scotland

Katharina Pruente

The Diplomatic Networks of Ancient Athens: The Evidence from the Decrees

Silvan Auf der Maur

SESSION 4: Short papers

Religious Networks in Late Babylonian Period (RelNet)

Rocio Da Riva

Archaeological networks in pre-Roman Italy: approaching new visual methodologies

Tayla Newland

Beyond nodegoat: a critical look at historical network research workflows

Pim van Bree, Geert Kessels

Visualization of Early Islamicate Scholars’ Network

Tuba Nur Saraçoğlu

Representing discourses as networks: potential applications of TheSu XML in network analysis for the history of ideas and science

Daniele Morrone

16.00-17:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS 

SESSION 5: Long papers 

Analysing artistic network of the Basilian order in Eighteenth-Century Poland-Lithuania: a digital humanities approach

Tomasz Panecki, Melchior Jakubowski

Integrating library and prosopographical data in the early modern publication network of the University of Louvain (1501-1797)

Rossana Scebba, Margherita Fantoli

SESSION 6: Short papers

Viewsari: New Perspectives on Historical Network Analysis in Giorgio Vasari’s The Lives Using Knowledge Graphs

Sarah Rebecca Ondraszek, Harald Sack, Etienne Posthumus

Shaping British Digital Art: the Global Network of the Computer Arts Society, 1968-1985

Pita Arreola, Jin Gao, Bonnie Buyuklieva

The assistance of the Church to the Jews in Milan during the Second World War

Chiara Bonomelli

Finance, business and Cultural Cold War: exploring transatlantic associationism’s networks in post-war Italy

Giulia Clarizia

Wednesday 10 July

9:00-10:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS

SESSION 7: Long papers

Gender diversity in the historical networks of Soviet film production

Vejune Zemaityte, Mila Oiva, Ksenia Mukhina, Aaron Schecter, Noshir S Contractor, Maximilian Schich

Tracing the Network Continuity: From the Socialist to the Communist Women’s Movement (1907-1934)

Minja Bujakovic

The transfer of German pedagogical knowledge to Turkey through Turkish educators in the Early Republican Era: A historical social network study in the field of transnational education

Seyma Aksoy

SESSION 8: Long papers

L’analyse de réseaux pour l’étude des coopérations intergouvernementales : le cas du Bureau International d’Éducation (1929-1952)

Émeline Brylinski

Visual Exchanges as a Network: The Case of Avant-Garde Periodicals

Nicola Carboni

The networked geography of a newspaper

Zef Segal

11:00-12:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS 

SESSION 9: Long papers 

Exploring Biographical Networks of Person Objects from Newspaper Clippings in Herder Institute

Erdal Ayan

Interactive Visualization of Linked Open Data Networks Representing Historical Writings

Sepideh Alassi

Visualising Bibliographical Data on Polish Literature after 1989

Maciej Maryl

SESSION 10: Short papers 

Networks of Displacement: Spatial and Temporal Dynamics of Post-WWII Migration and Resettlement

Konstantin Schischka

High Density = High Citations? Approaches for Tracking Knowledge Evolution

Raphael Schlattmann, Malte Vogl, Aleksandra Kaye

Complex networks allow a quantitative analysis of historical networks by data mining the Wikipedia corpus

Gustavo A. Schwartz

Geospatial Network of Internees in Switzerland during the Second World War - A Proof of Concept

Nóirín Ailis Rice

Containing complexity: Networks of expertise and the emergence of genetic epidemiology, 1900-1990

Carolina Mayes, Rhodri Leng

14:00-15:30 PARALLEL SESSIONS 

SESSION 11: Long papers

Networks and textual production during the Middle Ages (12th-15th centuries)

Pierre Lebec, Stéphane Lamassé

Modéliser les réseaux de pouvoir de la fin du Moyen Âge

Raphaël Carbonne

Network hermeneutics: exploring the meaning of a source using network analysis, case of inquisitorial protocols from 14th century Stettin

Kaarel Sikk, Välimäki Reima, David Zbíral

SESSION 12: Short papers 

Mapping Anglo-Swiss Travel Writing in the 17th and 18th Century

Stefanie Heeg

Using citation networks for viewpoint plurality assessment of historical literary corpora: The case of the Medieval Rabbinic corpus

Maayan Zhitomirsky-Geffet, Nati Ben-Gigi, Binyamin Katzoff, Jonathan Schler

Gouverner à distance : analyse d’un réseau d’espionnage contre-révolutionnaire dans l’Europe de la Révolution et de l’Empire napoléonien

Karine Rance, Aurelia Vasile

Mapping the networks of the Accademia dei Nobili della Giudecca: a sous-champ of the 18th Venetian Reforming Era

Filippo Soramel, Bastien Tourenc

Radical translators (Britain, France and Italy, 1789-1815) through the lens of a network visualisation

Miguel Vieira, Arianna Ciula, Rosa Mucignat, Sanja Perovic

16:00-17:30 PLENARY C

Closing keynote

Claire Lemercier

Closing remarks and next HNR conference announcement

Published from 13 September 2023 to 10 July 2024
Martin Grandjean, section d'histoire UNIL
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