Comments on: Stefan Nygård http://transnationalhistory.net/mvth/stefan-nygard/ Connecting History, Space and Digital Tools Tue, 10 Jun 2014 16:47:30 +0000 hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.0.1 By: Georgina Rannard http://transnationalhistory.net/mvth/stefan-nygard/#comment-19 Wed, 04 Jun 2014 22:45:15 +0000 http://transnationalhistory.net/mvth/?p=97#comment-19 Dear Stefan,

Thanks for this abstract – it’s very interesting to me, although it is not a topic I know much if anything about.
I was wondering what type of connections you wanted to visualise? For example, as a basic start, would you have a list of the people in Europe that Brandes corresponded with, and their locations, as well as volume of correspondence, and do you think you could plot this onto a map? Or equally, specific data on publication levels of his work?
Looking forward to hearing more about this!
Georgina

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By: Ananieva & Haaser http://transnationalhistory.net/mvth/stefan-nygard/#comment-9 Tue, 03 Jun 2014 17:43:13 +0000 http://transnationalhistory.net/mvth/?p=97#comment-9 Dear Stefan,
we found the abstract very inspiring because the concept of “Assymmetries in the intellectual space” highly applies to the Hungarian intellectuals before 1848 as well. In our findings we came across the interesting fact that these intellectuals (e. g. Zipser, Rumy etc.), use periodicals in different countries and in different languages, in order to achieve transnational recognition. Surprisingly they do not even hesitate to extensively use entertainment journals (which are at the core of our research interest) as their platform.

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