50%
French studies seminar, University of Basel
The French Studies Seminar at the University of Basel is looking for a self-sufficient and motivated IT technician (50%) to join the group " Le Rire des vers – Mining the Comic Verse " led by Anne-Sophie Bories and funded for 5 years by a PRIMA grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF).
Profile
Essential :
• Master's Degree (or equivalent) in IT,
• thorough knowledge of XML and related technologies (XSL, XPATH, XQUERY), as well as web development, both backend (e.g. SQL, eXist-db) and frontend (HTML, CSS, javascript),
• excellent ability to find practical and creative solutions,
• ability to learn new programming languages to fit needs,
• genuine curiosity for social sciences, literature or linguistics,
• highly self-sufficient,
• team worker with an inclination for initiative.
Desirable:
• basic knowledge of python and of NLP,
• interest for machine-learning, machine-reasoning, RDF, web ontologies,
• ability to share their knowledge.
Language skills:
• EITHER excellent mastery of English as working language and some knowledge of French,
• OR excellent mastery of French as working language and some knowledge of English.
Responsibilities
• assist team members in developing and maintaining tailored processes for efficient textmining,
• maintain the team's databases and guarantee their remote access,
• interact with other scientific teams in the context of collaborations,
• guide team members in the acquisition of new IT skills,
• create and maintain the project's website.
Conditions
One-year contract, renewable for 4 years.
Part-time: 50% (21 hours/week, flexible work hours).
5 weeks of paid holiday per year.
Salary according to SNF regulations for collaborators.
Project
The research project "Le Rire des vers – Mining the Comic Verse" is supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation through a 5 year PRIMA grant awarded to Dr. Anne-Sophie Bories. Beside this leader, the team will count 2 doctoral candidates and 1 IT technician (50%), and will form part of the French Studies Seminar at the University of Basel. The group will focus on the mapping, analysis and interpretation of both humour and versification in a corpus of modern texts, combining literary analyses with digital humanities methods.