| 
  • If you are citizen of an European Union member nation, you may not use this service unless you are at least 16 years old.

  • You already know Dokkio is an AI-powered assistant to organize & manage your digital files & messages. Very soon, Dokkio will support Outlook as well as One Drive. Check it out today!

View
 

DH Events and Calls for Papers

This version was saved 9 years, 5 months ago View current version     Page history
Saved by Alan Liu
on October 2, 2014 at 10:28:28 pm
 

Bulletin board of digital humanities events & CFPs (editable by all class members).

[Columns are sortable]

 

Event or Call For Paper
CFP Submission Deadline
Item Added By

Digital Humanities Summer Institute  http://www.dhsi.org/index.php

Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.  Three week-long session modules: 1-5 June, 8-12 June, and 15-19 June, 2014.

 

Long-running, influential summer institute--a kind of DH "summer camp"--organized around intensive short-duration courses at beginning, intermediate, and advanced levels, with keynote speakers interspersed.  Bursaries and MLA subsidies for costs available for students.  (A number of UCSB graduate students have attended DHSI.)

 
Alan

College English Association Annual Convention

Indianapolis, March 26-28, 2015, http://cea-web.org/

 

The special panel chair for Digital Humanities welcomes proposals for papers and panels addressing the following topics: 
  • DH projects (digital collections/archives, digital editions, interactive maps, 3D models, etc.) 
  • DH research tools (text analysis, visualization, GIS mapping, etc.)
  • DH pedagogy (teaching methodologies, curriculum development, project collaboration, etc.) 
  • DH centers (supporting research, consulting services, teaching faculty/students, etc.) 
  • Digital Project Management 
  • Data Curation
  • The Future of DH 
Please submit your paper title and abstract (200-500 words) to http://cea-web.org/ by 1 November 2014. Submitting electronically involves setting up a user ID and then using that ID to log in in order to submit a proposal to the conference. If you are submitting a panel with multiple participants, please create a user ID for each proposed participant.  If you have questions about the DH panels, contact E. Leigh Bonds <leigh.bonds@case.edu>. 

 

CEA also offers panels in Book History. If you have questions about BH panels, contact Ann Hawkins <ann.hawkins@ttu.edu> or Erin Bistline <erin.bistline@ttu.edu>.  

 

If you have questions about the CEA conference or the general program, visit our website <http://cea-web.org/> or email us <cea.english@gmail.com>.
1 Nov 2014
Alan

CFP: Theorizing the Digital Humanities — An Anthology
http://mattbernico.com/cfp-cfa-and-projects/


Theorizing the Digital Humanities is an invitation to unpack, critique and analyze the impact of digital media on the study of the humanities.  This anthology is not for the outlining or presentation of specific projects or praxis, but rather a means by which we can theorize about this emerging field.  Our goal for this edition is to create a number of theoretical in roads to talk about the digital humanities in critical and helpful ways.  Specifically we want to focus on how digital medium shapes the humanities and in turn how we can better theorize based on this insights. We invite you to submit an abstract for this anthology that outlines a philosophical contribution to the theorization and analysis of the digital humanities.

21 Nov 2014 Alan

“Textual Machines” Symposium

April 18, 2015, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA,

“Textual Machines” is an international symposium exploring literary objects that produce texts through the material interaction with mechanical devices or procedures. We define “textual machines” as a perspective on literature and book objects where text is “a mechanical device for the production and consumption of verbal signs” (Espen J. Aarseth). From the symposium’s perspective, textual machines are not limited to a specific media or epoch, and include literary objects ranging from early modern movable books, to modern pop-up books, artist’s books, game books, concrete poetry, combinatory literature, electronic literature and interactive fictions. A distinctive feature of textual machines is that they invite readers to traverse text through the non-trivial manipulation of mechanistic devices or procedures: by navigating through hyperlinks, footnotes, marginalia or other semiotic cues, or by answering to configurational, exploratory or writing prompts.

Keynote speakers:
    Janet MURRAY, Professor at the School of Literature, Media and Communication at the Georgia Institute of Technology and interaction designer.
    Serge BOUCHARDON, Professor at the University of Technology of Compiegne and author of interactive fictions.

 

[See more details and info about CFP here]

1 Jan 2015
Alan
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

 

 

 

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.