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DIGITALCLASSICIST Home

DIGITALCLASSICIST  October 2009

DIGITALCLASSICIST October 2009

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Subject:

DH2010: Digital Humanities 2010 CFP

From:

Stuart Dunn <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

The Digital Classicist List <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Wed, 7 Oct 2009 10:35:19 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (205 lines)

With apologies for cross-postings.

We are pleased to announce the Call for Papers for the Digital Humanities 2010
Conference.

Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations
Digital Humanities 2010
Call for Papers
Abstract Deadline: Oct. 31, 2009


Proposals must be submitted electronically using the system which will be
available at the conference web site from October 8th. Presentations may be
any of the following:

• Single papers (abstract max of 1500 words)
• Multiple paper sessions (overview max of 500 words)
• Posters (abstract max of 1500 words)

Call for Papers Announcement

The International Programme Committee invites submissions of abstracts of
between 750 and 1500 words on any aspect of humanities computing, broadly
defined to encompass the common ground between information technology and
problems in humanities research and teaching.  We welcome submissions in all
areas of the humanities, particularly interdisciplinary work. We especially
encourage submissions on the current state of the art in humanities computing,
and on recent developments.

Suitable subjects for proposals include, for example,

* text analysis, corpora, language processing, language learning
* IT in librarianship and documentation
* computer-based research in cultural and historical studies
* computing applications for the arts, architecture and music
* research issues such as: information design and modelling; the cultural
impact of the new media
* the role of digital humanities in academic curricula

The special theme of the 2010 conference is cultural heritage old and new.

The range of topics covered is reflected in the journals of the associations:
Literary and Linguistic Computing (LLC), Oxford University Press, and the
Digital Humanities Quarterly, http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/

The deadline for submitting paper, session and poster proposals to the
Programme Committee is Oct. 31th, 2009. All submissions will be refereed.
Presenters will be notified of acceptance February 24, 2010. The electronic
submission form will be available at the conference site from October 8th,
2009 (which will be linked from
http://www.cch.kcl.ac.uk/dh2010/papers/call.html)

Anyone who has previously used the ConfTool system to submit proposals or
reviews or to register for a Digital Humanities conference should use their
existing account rather than setting up a new one. 

If anyone has forgotten their user name and/or password please contact dh2010
at digitalhumanities.org.

See below for full details on submitting proposals.

Proposals for (non-refereed, or vendor) demos and for pre-conference tutorials
and workshops should be made to the local conference organizer as early as
possible. 

For more information on the conference in general please visit the DH2010 web
site.  http://www.cch.kcl.ac.uk/dh2010/

Types of Proposals

Proposals to the Programme Committee may be of three types: (1) papers, (2)
poster presentations and/or software demonstrations, and (3) sessions (either
three-paper or panel sessions). The type of submission must be specified in
the proposal.

Papers and posters may be given in English, French, German, Italian or
Spanish.

1) Papers
Proposals for papers (750-1500 words) should describe original, unpublished
work: preferably completed research with substantial results, but also the
development of significant new methodologies, or rigorous theoretical or
critical discussions. Individual papers have 20 min. for presentation and 10
for questions.

Proposals concerning new computing methodologies should show how the
methodologies are applied to humanities research, and should critically assess
the application. Those concerning a particular application should compare
earlier traditional and computational approaches and should also assess the
new methodologies. References are naturally required. Those describing the
creation or use of digital resources should follow these guidelines as far as
possible.

2) Poster Presentations and Software Demonstrations
Poster sessions showcase some of the most important and innovative work being
done in humanities computing. Poster presentations may include technology and
project demonstrations. Hence the term poster/demo to refer to different
possible combinations of printed and computer based presentations. There
should be no difference in quality between poster/demo presentations and
papers, and the format for proposals is the same for both. The same academic
standards also apply, but posters/demos may be more suitable way for
late-breaking work, or work in progress. Both will be submitted to the same
refereeing process. The choice between the two modes of presentation
(poster/demo or paper) should depend on the most effective and informative way
of communicating the scientific content of the proposal.

Poster presentations are less formal and more interactive than talks. Poster
presenters can present their work and exchange ideas one-on-one and in detail
with those most deeply interested. Presenters will have about two square
meters of board space for display and may also wish to provide handouts.
Posters remain on display throughout the conference, and are the sole focus of
separate dedicated poster sessions. Additional times may be available for
software or project demonstrations.

As an acknowledgement of the special contribution of the posters to the
conference, the Programme Committee will award a prize for the best poster.

3) Sessions
Sessions (90 minutes) take the form of either:

Three papers. The proposal should include a 500-word statement describing the
session topic, include abstracts of 750-1500 words for each paper, and
indicate that each author is willing to participate in the session.  All
speakers are required to register for the conference and to participate in the
session.  Focused sessions should have added value when compared to the set of
the individual papers.

or

A panel of four to six speakers. The proposal is an abstract of 750-1500 words
describing the panel topic, how discussion will be organized, the names and
affiliations of all the speakers, and an indication that each speaker is
willing to participate in the session.  All speakers are required to register
for the conference and to participate in the session.  


International Programme Committee

Elisabeth Burr
Richard Cunningham
Jan-Christoph Meister
Elli Mylonas
Brent Nelson
John Nerbonne (Chair) 
Bethany Noviskie
Jan Rybicki
John Walsh


-- 
Digital Humanities 2010
https://secure.digitalhumanities.org/




-- 

-----------------------


Dr Stuart Dunn
Research Fellow
Centre for e-Research
King's College London

www.ahessc.ac.uk/stuart-dunn

Tel +44 (0)207 848 2709
Fax +44 (0)207 848 1989
[log in to unmask]

Centre for e-Research
26-29 Drury Lane
London WC2B 5RL
UK

Geohash: http://geohash.org/gcpvj1zm7yp1




-- 

-----------------------


Dr Stuart Dunn
Research Fellow
Centre for e-Research
King's College London

www.ahessc.ac.uk/stuart-dunn

Tel +44 (0)207 848 2709
Fax +44 (0)207 848 1989
[log in to unmask]

Centre for e-Research
26-29 Drury Lane
London WC2B 5RL
UK

Geohash: http://geohash.org/gcpvj1zm7yp1

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