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Dear friends and colleagues,

On behalf of EADH I am pleased to announce that The *European Association
for Digital Humanities (EADH)* will hold its inaugural conference, on the
theme “*Data in Digital Humanities*“, at the National University of
Ireland, Galway from 7-9 December 2018.

See full Call for Papers in English below or visit
eadh2018.eadh.org/call-for-papers

**Please feel free to forward to anyone who might be interested.**

Kind regards,
Francesca Giovannetti
Communication fellow, EADH


*CFP TEXT IN ENGLISH*

*I: GENERAL INFORMATION*

The European Association for Digital Humanities (EADH) invites submission
of proposals for its first annual conference relating to the general theme
of “*Data in Digital Humanities*”.

Confirmed keynote speakers include *Elisabeth Burr *(University of Leipzig)
and *Vladimir A. Plungian *(Russian Academy of Sciences). A roundtable
session on the theme of data and digital humanities will be curated by
*Christof
Schöch*.

Possible paper and poster themes include, *but **are not limited to*:

   - Historical perspectives on data
   - Relationships between information, archives, documents and data
   - Data and metadata
   - The myth of raw data
   - Critical data and data critique
   - Data: dystopian and utopian
   - Data and creativity
   - Data science in digital humanities pedagogy

*II: TYPES OF PROPOSALS*

Presentations may include the following types:

   - Posters (abstract minimum 500 – maximum 750 words)
   - Short papers (abstract minimum 750 – maximum 1000 words)
   - Long papers (abstract minimum 1200 – maximum 1500 words)
   - Multiple paper panels (500-word abstracts + 500-word overview)
   - Pre-conference workshops and tutorials (proposal minimum 750 – maximum
   1200 words)

All proposals should include relevant citations to sources in the
appropriate literature. Citations are not to be included in the word count.
Additionally, proposals that concentrate on a particular tool or digital
resource should cite traditional as well as computer-based approaches to
the problem.


*a. Poster Presentations*Poster proposals may present work on any relevant
topic, or offer project tools or software demonstrations in any stage of
development. Poster presentations are intended to be interactive with the
opportunity to exchange ideas one-on-one with attendees. Posters are
subject to the same rigorous peer review as other presentation types, and
submissions in this category are strongly encouraged.


*b. Short Papers*Short paper proposals are intended to be dynamic 10-minute
presentations appropriate for reporting on experiments or works in progress
or for describing tools or software in development. Short paper sessions
seek to open dialogues among scholars working on related topics.


*c. Long Papers*Proposals for long papers should deal with substantial or
completed research; report the development of significant new methodologies
or digital resources; and present rigorous theoretical, speculative, or
critical discussions. Individual papers will be allocated 20 minutes for
presentation and 10 minutes for questions. Proposals relating to the
development of new computing methodologies or digital resources should
indicate how the methods are applied to research and/or teaching in the
humanities and what their impact has been in formulating and addressing
research questions. They should also include critical assessments of their
application in the humanities as well as of the computing methodologies
used.


*d. Multiple Paper Panels*Panels should focus on a single theme and be
conceived as 90-minute sessions of four to six speakers.


*e. Pre-Conference Workshops*Workshops are normally either half-day or
full-day intensive introductions to specific techniques, software packages
or theoretical approaches with a small number of participants. Participants
in pre-conference workshops will be expected to register for the full
conference as well as pay a small additional fee. Workshops proposals
should provide the following information:

   - Title and brief description of the content or topic and its relevance
   to the digital humanities community.
   - Intended length and format of the workshop (minimum half-day; maximum
   one-and-a-half days);
   - Full contact information for all tutorial instructors or workshop
   leaders, including a one-paragraph statement summarizing their research
   interests and areas of expertise;
   - Description of target audience and expected number of participants
   (based, if possible, on past experience); and
   - Special requirements for technical support.
   - Proposed budget (workshops are expected to be self-financing); and if
   the workshop is to have its own call for participation, a deadline and date
   for notification of acceptances, and a list of individuals who have agreed
   to be part of the workshop’s Programme Committee.

The committee will not normally accept more than a total of two submissions
from one primary or co-author. The EADH in its conferences accepts
proposals in English, French, German, Italian, Spanish (and other languages
subject to the availability of reviewers).

All presenters are *strongly encouraged to prepare their presentations in
two languages for the conference*. Both language versions should present
high-quality slides that allow participants to follow the flow of thoughts
and arguments developed in the talk. *Presenters may either give their talk
in one language and present slides in the second language, or present the
slides in the language of the talk and make the second version of their
slides available on the conference website or via a handout*.

The deadline for submitting poster, short paper, long paper, multiple-paper
panel proposals and workshop proposals to the Programme Committee is *23:59
GMT on 18 June 2018*. Presenters will be notified of acceptance by 22
August 2018.

*Proposals may be submitted by following the PROPOSALS
<https://eadh2018eadh.wordpress.com/submission-of-proposals/> link on the
conference website:*

*eadh2018.eadh.org <http://eadh2018.eadh.org/>*

EADH2018 will be using double-blind peer review. To facilitate this
process, please remove all identifying information from your proposal
submission including author name and affiliation.

Presenters are encouraged to familiarize themselves with *Global
Outlook::Digital Humanities’ Translation Toolkit* to prepare for a
bilingual conference. This includes guidelines and best practices for
multilingual slides/posters/handouts and ad-hoc community translation:
http://go-dh.github.io/translation-toolkit/conferences/

Similarly, participants are strongly encouraged to make themselves aware of
current recommendations for accessibility of presentations and
multimedia-based materials. Please review the *World Wide Web Consortium’s
Web Initiative Guidelines on Presentation Accessibility*:
https://www.w3.org/WAI/training/accessible

*III: EADH CONFERENCE CODE OF CONDUCT*

The EADH as a member of the ADHO is committed to creating a safe,
respectful, and collegial conference environment for the benefit of
everyone who attends and for the advancement of research and scholarship.
The ADHO Digital Humanities conference *Code of Conduct* is available at:

http://adho.org/administration/conference-coordinating-program-committee/adho-conference-code-conduct
.

All participants in EADH2018 should observe and uphold it.