Émilie Pagé-Perron

Assyriologist and Digital Scholar
emilie.page-perron@wolfson.ox.ac.uk

Assyriologist and Digital Scholar Émilie Pagé-Perron is the first Junior Research Fellow in Assyriology at Wolfson College. Her research interests encompass Mesopotamian social history, Sumerian philology, and Computational Linguistics of cuneiform languages.

Émilie employs both a traditional philological approach and computational methods in her work. Although her education is based in the Humanities, she has perfected her skills in data science, with a focus on data management and curation, natural language processing, and network analysis.

After a B.A. in Religious Studies specializing in Hinduism at the Université du Québec à Montréal, Émilie has pursued her interest in the Ancient World at the Université de Genève with Prof. Antoine Cavigneaux, where she prepared a Master's thesis on the fishing industry in the Early Dynastic IIIb period (2012). Her doctoral dissertation discusses social identity in the third millennium through a study of the pantheon of the ancient city of Adab. 

Émilie is co-director of the Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative and editor of the Cuneiform Digital Library Notes. Her publications include: 2018 “Network Analysis for Reproducible Research on Large Administrative Cuneiform Corpora” in Vanessa Juloux, Amy Gansell and Alessandro di Ludovico eds. CyberResearch on the Ancient Near East and Eastern Mediterranean. Case Studies on texts, objects, and archaeological data. Brill 192-221 (read more) and É. P.-P., Maria Sukhareva, Ilya Khait, and Christian Chiarcos 2017 “Machine Translation and Automated Analysis of the Sumerian Language” LaTeCH-CLfL workshop,  Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) Anthology (read more).
 

The Origins of Life

Add to Calendar The Origins of LifeYouTube
Location
YouTube
Speakers
Paul Davies and Sara Walker
Event price
free
Event type
Lectures and Seminars
Booking Required
Not Required
Contact name
Chiara Marletto
Contact email
chiara.marletto@wolfson.ox.ac.uk

We know that life emerged from a precursor soup of chemicals. But exactly how did it happen? Why do we find it so difficult to do this in a laboratory? And if the processes which produce life are so opaque, how can we judge whether life is a rare or common phenomenon in the universe? At the intersection of physics and biology two great scientists and communicators debate these questions, with Sir Tim Hitchens in the chair.

Generously supported by the Eutopia Foundation.

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Oxford Minds Lecture on 'Belonging'

Add to Calendar Oxford Minds Lecture on 'Belonging'Zoom
Location
Zoom
Speakers
Professor Elleke Boehmer
Event type
Lectures and Seminars
Booking Required
Required

The series



This term’s series explores social science’s big concepts. It examines the contested meaning and diverse application of some of the theoretical ideas that unify and challenge social scientists. It brings together the bright minds of Oxford, and high profile external speakers, to consider the range of ways in which we can think about ‘power’, ‘space’, ‘identity’, and ‘belonging’.

Elleke Boehmer is Professor of World Literature in English in the English Faculty, University of Oxford, and Director of the Oxford Centre for Life-Writing (OCLW), based at Wolfson College. She was the Director of TORCH 2015-17, and PI on the Andrew W. Mellon-funded ‘Humanities and Identities’ project at The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities, 2017-18. She is a founding figure in the field of colonial and postcolonial studies, and internationally known for her research in anglophone literatures of empire and anti-empire. She is a novelist and short story writer, most recently of The Shouting in the Dark (2015 and 2019), and To the Volcano (2019).


 

Wolfson's early years

Race and Ethics

Wolfson College sees itself as a proud member of the global community and strives to be a modern and egalitarian college. As a college we want to keep educated and contribute to the debate on decolonisation. We encourage you to join the conversation on Oxford and colonialism.

On this page we have gathered information about Wolfson's early years, race and ethics.

07 June 2022
DPhil Student recognised in 2022 Vice Chancellor’s Diversity Awards

Congratulations to Wolfson DPhil Student, Mary Adeyemo who was awarded a highly commended Vice Chancellor’s Diversity Award.

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22 April 2021
Sir Tim Hitchens publishes Commonwealth War Graves report into inequality in death

Sir Tim Hitchens, President of Wolfson College and Commonwealth War Graves Commissioner, this morning published the report of a Special Committee he chaired to Review Historical Inequalities in Commemoration.

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16 March 2021
South-South Globalisation Podcast

Temitope Ajileye, DPhil student at Wolfson, has set up a podcast which will tell stories of contacts, movements, and exchanges of people, capital and ideas between countries that are part of the Global South.

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In Conversation

Climate Action at Wolfson

We're reducing our environmental impact by working through our buildings, supply chains and personal habits. 

George Monbiot, Honorary Fellow - "I know from spending time with its community of brilliant scholars how passionate Wolfson College is about preventing climate breakdown."

18 April 2024
Governing Body Fellow wins Leverhulme Fellowship to explore Energy in the Global South

Professor Nikita Sud has won a Leverhulme Research Fellowship to research her forthcoming monograph into the transition to green energy in the Global South.

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17 January 2023
Wolfson College is the UK’s first Zero Carbon Higher Education Institution

Wolfson College has become the first Higher Education Institution in the UK to eliminate Scope 1 and 2 carbon emissions from its estate.

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21 November 2023
Green Energy and the Global South

Wolfson Fellow Nikita Sud shares insights on the impact of the transition to green energy in Indonesia

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