Skip to content

The Digital Orientalist

Practical examples and theoretical reflections on the do's and don'ts of using digital tools for your study and research in African and Asian Studies.

Primary Navigation

  • About The Digital Orientalist
  • Editorial Team
    • About Cornelis van Lit
    • About Maddalena Poli
    • About James Harry Morris
    • About Jonathan Robker
    • About Mariana Zorkina
    • About Elizabeth Bishop
    • About Zachary Butler
    • About Alice Casalini
    • About Rohan Chauhan
    • About Christopher Diamond
    • About Michele Eduarda Brasil de Sá
    • About Matthew Hayes
    • About Ephrem Ishac
    • About Henry Jacobs
    • About 김병준 Byungjun Kim
    • About Tyler Kynn
    • About Elizabeth Lee
    • About Shiva Mihan
    • About So Miyagawa
    • About Thomas Newhall
    • About Adrian Plau
    • About Lu Wang
    • About Anaïs Wion
    • About Theodora Zampaki
  • Topics
    • African Studies
    • African Languages
    • Ancient Near Eastern Studies
    • Archiving
    • Between Legal and Illegal
    • Buddhist Studies
    • Chinese Language
    • Coding
    • DH in General
    • DH in Practice
    • Digital Cartography
    • Digitization
    • Equipment
    • Events & Conferences
    • Hardware
    • Housekeeping
    • Indian Studies
    • Islamic Studies
    • Iranian Studies
    • Islamic Languages
    • Japanese Studies
    • Mongolian Studies
    • OCR
    • Online Resources
    • Ottoman Studies
    • Sinology
    • Social Media
    • Software
    • Syriac Studies
    • Teaching
    • Textual Analysis
    • Theory
    • Using Real Paper
    • Visualization
    • Workflow
    • Korean Studies
  • Social Media
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • Youtube
  • Guest Contributors & Hall of Fame
  • The Digital Orientalist’s Conferences
    • The DO 2023 Conference: schedule and abstracts
    • Digital Orientalist’s 2022 Conference “Infrastructures”
      • Titles and abstracts
      • Infrastructures. Schedule
    • The Digital Orientalist’s Virtual Workshop and Conference 2021
    • Twitter Conference #DOsTC2020
  • Publications
  • Search
  • ISSN: 2772-8374

Author: giuliabhu

Becoming a PANDiT
Indian Studies, Online Resources

Becoming a PANDiT

This posts introduces PANDiT, aka Prosopographic Database for Indic Texts, a useful tool for any Indologist out there. Continue reading Becoming a PANDiT

Digitizing Indian Music
Digitization, Indian Studies, OCR, Online Resources

Digitizing Indian Music

This article presents the project of digitization of a large amount of handwritten material that is part of the Fondo Daniélou at Cini Foundation (San Giorgio, Venice). Continue reading Digitizing Indian Music

Once upon a Camera…
DH in General, Indian Studies, Visualization

Once upon a Camera…

This article gives a basic introduction to photogrammetry by using the Agisoft Metashape software. Continue reading Once upon a Camera…

Mapping Ancient Indian Urban Spaces
Digital Cartography, Indian Studies, Online Resources, Software, Visualization

Mapping Ancient Indian Urban Spaces

This article deals with GIS in Classical Indian Studies, focusing on the case-study of “Mapping Vijayanagara.” Continue reading Mapping Ancient Indian Urban Spaces

Online Resources for Indian Studies
Indian Studies, Online Resources

Online Resources for Indian Studies

This post gives an overview of some of the cool online resources for Indologists. Continue reading Online Resources for Indian Studies

Website Powered by WordPress.com.
  • Follow Following
    • The Digital Orientalist
    • Join 256 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • The Digital Orientalist
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar