Perhaps the most crucial underlying practice by which literary scholarship values and evaluates texts is 'close reading'. Surprisingly, this value practice has been little theorised and remains a fetishised concept in scholarship, criticism and beyond, often echoing its alleged peak in New Criticism. The panels of this section thus looked at how this hermeneutic and didactic technique has spread to almost all humanities disciplines in the 20th century. They developed a value-praxeological understanding of close reading and discussed its ideological and transdisciplinary transformations, especially regarding the global circulation of this practice. As a practical pendant, two Digital Humanities Workshops on metrics research and on digital editing investigated value praxeologies via a hands-on process.