Category: Blog Post

My Contribution to The Public Domain Review’s Second Essay Collection

Comenius Animal Sounds

Last year, I published an essay on John Comenius and the first children’s picture book at the Public Domain Review, and I’m happy to report that it is now available in print!

You can order your copy of the collection here, with a discount and guaranteed Christmas delivery if you order by November 18. Scope it out.

The Public Domain Review is a non-profit publication that aims to “promote and celebrate the public domain in all its abundance and variety, and help our readers explore its rich terrain – like a small exhibition gallery at the entrance to an immense network of archives and storage rooms that lie beyond”—you can read more about their work at their own site. It’s a great publication with an honorable mission. If you like what you see, consider making a donation!

A Collection of Resources for Classics Research

As I near the end of my graduate education, I’ve put together a list of resources that have been helpful over the last several years. I’ve included some websites for searching Latin and Greek corpora (not just Perseus!), some good Unicode fonts that can render Greek well, a tool for running OCR on scans of Latin texts, and a dictionary of modern English terms translated into Latin.

If you have another resource in mind that belongs on this list, please e-mail me!

LaTeX Template for Columbia University Dissertations

GitHub Octocat Logo

Like many other academics, I’m writing my dissertation using LaTeX. It’s great software to use for preparing large documents with complex citations. My impression is that most academics who use LaTeX work in the sciences or mathematics, but I know I lot of people in humanities departments (especially philosophy) who use it, too.

Columbia (like most universities) requires dissertations to follow very particular formatting guidelines, and it can be tricky to get LaTeX to do exactly what you want regarding formatting. (In fact, one of the great advantages of using LaTeX is that it automatically formats your documents really well.) I wrote a template to meet the guidelines for dissertations at Columbia, and I’ve posted the template here at GitHub. The template should be really helpful for anyone writing a dissertation here. Even if you study at a different university, the template could be useful just to get your formatting on the right track.

The template includes some extra features on top of fulfilling these formatting guidelines. It sets up Unicode support, it provides a folder structure to keep your chapters organized, and it sets up a citation style (using biblatex) that should be especially helpful for students in the humanities.