CLS INFRA: Computational Literary Studies Infrastructure
@clsinfra.bsky.social
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https://clsinfra.io Building a shared and sustainable infrastructure for literary studies in the digital age. Funded by @HorizonEU (Horizon 2020, grant agreement No 101004984)
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clsinfra.bsky.social
Thank you to all our project colleagues, followers, collaborators, funders, and supporters! CLS INFRA has been a success thanks to your engagement. Here's to the future of computational literary studies! 💙 #CLSINFRA #DigitalHumanities #OpenResearch @horizoneu.bsky.social
A photo taken at the CLS INFRA closing event in Krakow.
clsinfra.bsky.social
Want to explore training materials from CLS INFRA? Visit campus.dariah.eu and search for “CLS INFRA” to access resources on data annotation, network analysis, and more in computational literary studies.
@dariaheu.bsky.social #CLSINFRA #DigitalHumanities #OpenEducation
DARIAH-Campus
Discovery layer and hosting platform for DARIAH learning resources.
campus.dariah.eu
clsinfra.bsky.social
Catch up on resource explainers, TNA fellow interviews, and other highlights from the CLS INFRA project on our YouTube channel. It’s a great way to revisit key project milestones and explore digital literary studies in action: www.youtube.com/@clsinfra6863
#CLSINFRA #DigitalHumanities #OpenResearch
CLS INFRA
www.youtube.com
clsinfra.bsky.social
Dive into the CLS INFRA Zenodo community to access open datasets, reports, and publications from across the project. It’s a lasting archive of our project resources for supporting computational literary studies: zenodo.org/communities/...
#CLSINFRA #OpenResearch #DigitalHumanities
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zenodo.org
clsinfra.bsky.social
Looking for tools, training materials, and documentation from the CLS INFRA project? Our website remains a rich resource for researchers and educators in computational literary studies. Visit: clsinfra.io
#CLSINFRA #DigitalHumanities #OpenResearch
CLS INFRA – Computational Literary Studies Infrastructure
clsinfra.io
clsinfra.bsky.social
Our final newsletter is now available, summarising key achievements and reflections from the final months of the CLS INFRA project. Read it here: mailchi.mp/71ff23003939...
FINAL CLS INFRA Newsletter
mailchi.mp
clsinfra.bsky.social
Please note: our social media accounts will no longer be actively used or monitored. For updates and resources, we invite you to explore our website and other platforms listed below ⬇️
clsinfra.bsky.social
The CLS INFRA project has officially concluded. After four transformative years, our work in building infrastructure for computational literary studies is complete. Thank you for being part of this journey!
Reposted by CLS INFRA: Computational Literary Studies Infrastructure
audinyann.bsky.social
On my way back from #DH2025 to Montreal with some merch, thanks to @clsinfra.bsky.social!

(Please no comment on my general appearance and tired eyes, I got to the airport around 5am...)

I was really impressed by the state of computational literary studies in Europe!
A tired looking academic wearing the official CLS-INFRA T-shirt.
clsinfra.bsky.social
🥳👏
dhpotsdam.bsky.social
Stylo got the Zampolli prize for outstanding output in #DigitalHumanities 🏆 Congrats to Maciej Eder, @mikekestemont.bsky.social, Jan Rybicki, Joanna Byszuk, and all involved with the Computational Stylistics Group!👏 Prev. recipients were Voyant Tools, TEI, R. Siemens, C. Gaffield
#DH2025 #stylometry
Reposted by CLS INFRA: Computational Literary Studies Infrastructure
sjhoover.bsky.social
@clsinfra.bsky.social - Delighted to see CLS INFRA people winning the Antonio Zampolli Prize at #DH2025! Congratulations Maciej Eder, @joannaby.bsky.social, @artjomshl.bsky.social, Rozalia Słodczyk and the rest of the Computational Stylistics Group!
clsinfra.bsky.social
Evgeniia Fileva presents CLS INFRA research at yesterday’s “Comparative Literature Goes Digital” #DH2025 Mini-Conference dls.hypotheses.org/1952
A conference room with a presentation slide displayed on a projector screen. The slide is titled "Multilingual Stylometry" and discusses the influence of language on the performance of authorship attribution using corpora from the European Literary Text Collection (ELTeC). The authors listed are Evgenia Fileva, Julia Havyrlash, Christof Schöch, and Artjoms Šeļa. There is a QR code for accessing the presentation. Two people are seated at desks with computers in front of them.
Reposted by CLS INFRA: Computational Literary Studies Infrastructure
jcls-io.bsky.social
Not had enough of #CCLS2025 yet? Next year is already our fifth anniversary! Get excited for #CCLS2026 in Potsdam! @dhpotsdam.bsky.social 🥳
#ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CLS #DH #LiteraryComputing
clsinfra.bsky.social
Our Closing Event may have concluded, but CLS INFRA members continue to present project work at CCLS! @jcls-io.bsky.social

Here’s Bartek Kunda with our project poster, while Maciej Eder delivered the conference keynote yesterday.
A person wearing a black 'CLSINFRA' t-shirt stands next to a large poster titled 'CLS INFRA: Leveraging Computational Literary Methods.' The poster includes sections on VELD and CLSciro, user needs beyond academia, prototypes and pipelines (NER, REX, ABSA), reproducibility with DraCor, and training and internationalisation. Diagrams, QR codes, and logos of partner institutions are also visible. Some text is partially obscured or unreadable due to the person’s position and image resolution. Three people stand in a well-lit hallway in front of a series of academic posters mounted on partition walls. The visible poster on the left is titled 'CLS INFRA: Leveraging Computational Literary Methods' and includes sections on leveraging NLP and AI for literary studies—such as text mining, named entity recognition, sentiment analysis, and topic modeling. It also mentions use cases in research and education, lists project partners, and displays logos of funding organizations.
Reposted by CLS INFRA: Computational Literary Studies Infrastructure
jcls-io.bsky.social
Final talk for today at #CCLS2025:
Maciej Eder giving the #keynote on "Text Analysis Made Simple (Kind of), or Ten Years of Stylo" 🎂🥳

He underlines the necessity of having a good infrastructure to make research in computational literary studies possible.
Thanks go out to @clsinfra.bsky.social.
clsinfra.bsky.social
A stellar lineup for our final panel discussion on The Future of Computational Literary Studies: Jennifer Edmond, Julie Birkholz, Artjoms Šeļa, and Karina van Dalen-Oskam, chaired by Joanna Byszuk.
A panel of five people is seated at a long wooden table with microphones and water bottles in front of them. A woman stands at a podium labeled 'CLS INFRA Computational Literary Studies Infrastructure,' speaking into a microphone and using a laptop. Behind her, a whiteboard displays Wi-Fi login information.
clsinfra.bsky.social
…of course, some were better-dressed than others.
A group of six people stands indoors, all wearing black t-shirts with the text 'CLSINFRA' printed on them. They are posing in front of a purple banner that reads 'CLSINFRA COMPUTATIONAL LITERARY STUDIES INFRASTRUCTURE.' The background includes a wooden door and some office furniture.
clsinfra.bsky.social
Thank you to those who joined us today for the CLS INFRA Closing Event!
A group of approximately twenty people stands together in a room with beige walls and tiled flooring. They are dressed in a variety of outfits, including dresses, skirts, pants, and shirts. A metal barrier with a sign is visible in the foreground.
clsinfra.bsky.social
It's truly inspiring to hear how the CLS INFRA Transnational Access Fellowship has helped to support & develop such a wide range of groundbreaking research.

To learn more about more than FIFTY researchers who benefited from our project's support, visit our TNA Archive: clsinfra.io/opportunitie...
TNA Archive – CLS INFRA
clsinfra.io
clsinfra.bsky.social
The final TNA Fellow to present this afternoon is @marko-milosev.bsky.social of the European University Institute, who visited UNED Madrid in 2023 to work on his research on ideology and violence in interwar fascist organisations.
A man stands in front of a presentation screen holding a microphone. The slide on the screen is titled 'Words to actions: How and if ideology translates to violence in the case of interwar fascist organizations' by Marko Milošev, PhD. It includes his contact email (me@markomilosev.com) and the logo of the European University Institute. A desk in front of him holds a computer monitor, keyboard, and bottles of water.
clsinfra.bsky.social
@laurasoffiantini.bsky.social of KU Leuven now presents on her research on formulaic language in Latin funerary epigraphy; she visited Ghent University for a TNA Fellowship early in our project.
A woman stands next to a podium in a lecture room, presenting a slide titled 'Formulaic language in Latin funerary epigraphy.' The slide includes logos of FWO, KU Leuven, CLS INFRA, and Universiteit Gent. The presenter's name is Laura Soffiantini with the email address laura.Soffiantini@kuleuven.be. The date 'July 2nd' and location 'Krakow' are visible in the top right corner of the slide."
clsinfra.bsky.social
For the first talk after lunch, @jakmen.bsky.social of MLU Halle-Wittenberg presents her work on nineteenth-century literary multilingualism, developed during a TNA Fellowship at the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
Jana-Katharina Mende presents her work on nineteenth-century literary multilingualism, developed during a TNA Fellowship at the Austrian Academy of Sciences.
clsinfra.bsky.social
More poetry! (One can never have enough). Anna Mędrzecka-Stefańska of the Polish Academy of Sciences discusses her TNA Fellowship at Charles University where she worked on a corpus of Polish poetry.
Anna Mędrzecka-Stefańska discusses her TNA Fellowship at Charles University where she worked on a corpus of Polish poetry.
clsinfra.bsky.social
Simone Marcenaro, Università del Molise, trialled using LLM technologies for translations of Galician-Portuguese Troubador poetry while visiting University of Galway, and its Crosswinds project, for his TNA Fellowship.
Simone Marcenaro, Università del Molise, trialled using LLM technologies for translations of Galician-Portuguese Troubador poetry while visiting University of Galway, and its Crosswinds project, for his TNA Fellowship.
clsinfra.bsky.social
Lucas Van der Deijl, University of Groningen, spent his TNA Fellowship at University of Potsdam where he contributed a corpus of 150 early-modern Dutch plays to @dracor.org: dracor.org/dutch
Lucas Van der Deijl, University of Groningen, spent his TNA Fellowship at University of Potsdam where he contributed a corpus of 150 early-modern Dutch plays to @dracor.org