The Global Outlook::Digital Humanities Essay Contest Deadline has been
extended until Noon GMT July 6, 2013. A description of the competition
can be found below and at the GO::DH website:
http://www.globaloutlookdh.org/global-outlookdigital-humanities-global-digi…
The deadline is being extended in recognition of the diverse nature of
the target audience and to ensure that nobody is prevented from
contributing due to infrastructure problems or late notice of the
competition.
Participants who have already made a submission but feel that they could
profit from the extension are welcome to resubmit their work by the
extended deadline, otherwise the original submission will be entered in
the competition. In the case of multiple submissions from the same
author, the committee will use the latest submission unless otherwise
instructed.
The adjudication would like to thank the many participants who have
already made submissions to the competition. We are very much looking
forward to reading your work!
-dan
P.S. We apparently forgot to list Word as an acceptable format for
submission. This was an oversight on our part. The committee can
consider files in Word format.
==============================
Contest description
Global Outlook :: Digital Humanities, The University of Lethbridge,
Digital Studies/Le champ numérique, and The Alliance of Digital
Humanities Organisations is pleased to announce the first Global Digital
Humanities Essay Competition.
http://www.globaloutlookdh.org/global-outlookdigital-humanities-global-digi…
This is an open competition for research papers on the national,
regional, or international practice of the Digital Humanities--a broad
topic that has been designed to give authors the greatest possible
scope. Authors may write on individual projects or problems or broader
philosophical, geographical, sociological, political, or other aspects
of the practice of Digital Humanities in a global context. Papers
discussing the practice of DH by or with marginalised communities or in
areas that are currently less well represented by ADHO are particularly
welcome.
The competition is open to any interested party including students,
graduate students, junior faculty, and researchers unaffiliated with a
university or research institution. We would like to especially
encourage submissions from students, junior and unaffiliated
researchers, and authors belonging to marginalised communities or
communities currently less well represented by ADHO.
The competition is offering a minimum of 4 prizes of $500 (CAD) each.
Initial selection (for a prize of $200) is by abstract/proposal. A
further $300 will be awarded to the authors of the winning abstracts
upon satisfactory completion of a full-length paper based on their
original proposal. All submissions will be eligible for review and
publication in the ADHO journal, Digital Studies/Le champ numérique
(http://digitalstudies.org/).
For further information about the competition, please see the
competition web page:
http://www.globaloutlookdh.org/global-outlookdigital-humanities-global-digi….
The competition organisers can also be contacted by email at
prizes(a)globaloutlookdh.org
The initial deadline (abstracts/proposals) is June 30, 2013.
-Daniel Paul O'Donnell
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Canada
+1 403 393-2539
From: Neil Fraistat <nfraistat(a)gmail.com <mailto:nfraistat@gmail.com>>
Dear all,
The Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO) invites its
members to propose a Special Interest Group (SIG). By forming a SIG,
those with similar professional specialties, interests, and aptitudes
can exchange ideas, stay current, and mobilize to pursue common goals
across the boundaries of ADHOs individual Constituent Organizations.
For example, ADHOs first SIG, Global Outlook::Digital Humanities
<http://www.globaloutlookdh.org/>(GO::DH), aims to reduce barriers to
communication and collaboration among researchers and students of the
Digital Arts, Humanities, and Cultural Heritage sectors in High, Mid,
and Low Income Economies by promoting discovery, community-building,
research, and advocacy.
To propose a SIG
<http://adho.org/administration/steering/draft-protocol-adho-special-interes…>,
an elected or appointed contact person should submit a description of
the group to ADHOs Chair, currently Neil Fraistat
<mailto:nfraistat@gmail.com>. Please see theSIG protocol
<http://adho.org/administration/steering/protocol-adho-special-interest-grou…>for
directions about producing the SIG proposal, a model proposal, and
further information.
If you will be attending DH 2013, we invite you to a SIG Slam, where
those interested in starting a SIG can do one-minute pitches about them
and meet with others who share their interests. The SIG Slam will take
place during the joint ADHO/centerNet General Members meeting at
lunchtime on Friday, July 19th.
Best,
Neil
--
Neil Fraistat
Professor of English & Director
Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH)
0301 Hornbake Library North
University of Maryland
301-405-5896 or 301-314-7111 (fax)
http://www.mith.umd.edu/https://twitter.com/fraistat
Hi Marjorie,
I was talking about data and resources from the perspective of the maintenance problems they produce rather than intrinsic qualities. But I would still maintain that there is a fundamental epistemological difference between outputs and processes, or as I called them, data and projects/resources (in broad terms, I'd say the difference between a project and a resource is that the former has an end date and the later doesn't; but both are processes).
To me, the important thing about data is that they exist and they are used for something (that's even built into the etymology of the term). We can distinguish between primary and secondary data, but data are still the stuff you build your interpretation and analysis from. In English in the humanities we call them "primary and secondary resources," but that is a historical accident: in print, everything is ultimately data, since it is fixed on the page at some point and your maintenance issues become purely archival (something I would say is a defining feature of data as opposed to processes); while there are resources in my sense in the print world--e.g. journals--the temptation to build resources is less in that world than in the digital, since the commitment is so much more obvious.
So to give an example. If I am writing an article about the appearance of the phoenix in the OE Phoenix poem, my data are "the poem," the other secondary work I cite, reference works I use, and so on. I'm guessing your analysis would say only "the poem" is data in this case. But if it were, then I would ask "what do you mean by 'the poem'"? If I use a transcription or an edition, I'm really accessing the text through a secondary source that has analysis built into it. I don't see the difference between basing my reading of a poem on an edition and basing my analysis of a concept on some secondary work on that concept. You might say that this problem goes away if I base my readings on the manuscript itself, but I'd say you aren't actually changing anything: you are still basing your readings on an interpretation, the only difference is that you did the textual interpretation upon which your analysis is based yourself instead of relying on that of an outsider.
However, in this thread, we were talking about the project management implications, and I'd say the distinction is even stronger there. Seen from the producer side, data are the outputs of your project or resource which others use for their own work. Seen from the consumer side, they are information from a project or resource that you inherit, acquire, produce, or extend through further accumulation, and, then, presumably, analyse and use for higher research purposes. The key thing is that data ultimately has to be in some sense isolatable in order to be used. Data by its very nature represents a snap-shot in time and/or conceptual space.
My argument was that you should take advantage of this property and always strive to ensure that your projects result in something that can be considered in some sense "finished". That's not the same thing as saying "definitive" or "complete": good data leads to additional questions and revisions. But what I mean is you should always strive to have outputs that you can exist as a snap-shot in time or conceptual space and that could remain useful when you are dead or no longer interested in maintaining them. And that means getting them in a shape where they can be archived by professionals and don't require active maintenance.
The only reason why this was important is because it is easier in the digital world than in the print to accidentally turn data into resources by adding secondary features that raise almost impossible maintenance burdens. One example of this is deciding that you want to control who extends your data or how they do it: for example, by deciding you are going to referee future additions or insist that others follow your protocols; another is wrapping your data up so tightly in a specific processing environment or process that you will lose the data if you fail to maintain the processor.
I guess if I had to sum up, I'd say: data is something that can be archived and resources are things that need to be maintained (and so can't be archived).
My argument was that that resources carry incredibly heavy costs with them and, in the long run, will always fail (Chaucer never did manage to revoke all his licentious tales, after all). So if you decide your data must be published in a form that requires active subsequent maintenance, realise what you are setting yourself up for and try to design it so that it degrades well when people cease to maintain it. But better, try to distinguish between your resources and data from the very beginning and see all resources as temporary things.
-dan
________________________________
From: dm-l-bounces(a)uleth.ca [dm-l-bounces(a)uleth.ca] on behalf of Marjorie Burghart [marjorie.burghart(a)ehess.fr]
Sent: June-22-13 3:37
To: dm-l, MailList
Subject: Re: [dm-l] Re: How to make your data live forever (and maybe your project?)
Hi Dan!
Maybe this is a bit side-tracked, but I would argue with the definition of data and resource that you give (data most of all). To me data is raw, primary material, and I am not comfortable considering articles, monographs, dictionaries or edited texts as data, for instance. They are an elaborate, secondary material, they are knowledge produced from data, but not data themselves.
As for resource, to me it can be a simple means to access data or more elaborate material, but that's not my main definition of a resource. I would call a resource any coherent set of material, primary or secondary - for instance to me the Online Froissart is a resource on Froissart's chronicle; I would also call a resource, to a certain extent, a project providing users with nifty means of processing a set of data (for instance, the project preparing the digital edition of Flaubert's "Bouvard et Pécuchet" put a lot of efforts into building an interface that would let the user navigate through Flaubert's material for his unfinished novel and make hypothesis about its potential construction - an interface which is fully part of the project).
It seems to me that there are more projects aiming at producing resources rather than data, which can explain why they are so difficult to maintain. The coherence would be lost if the material was just poured and melted into a large data repository, or the data would lose most of its interest if separated from the specific tools created by a project to process it.
Maybe this distinction can shed some different light on the issue: curation of secondary material is a long-established tradition, through libraries, but curation of data is a different kettle of fish. There are not powerful pre-existing traditions and models as for secondary material, and the digital lore has to invent them quickly. As for resources (according to my definition), their inherent coherence and the often very strong link between data/material and the interface created to use it means that maintaining the interface is a often central issue, and one that is particularly difficult to solve in the long term.
Best, Marjorie
On 22 June 2013 01:23, Daniel O'Donnell <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca<mailto:daniel.odonnell@uleth.ca>> wrote:
Personally, I think you need to make two or maybe three distinctions: between data, resources (maybe), and projects.
* Projects create and/or analyse data. They have a definite beginning and end and they are run by somebody. This means the main preservation problem is how you keep them going until they "finish." Once they finish, their outputs are either data or resources or both. An example of a project might be the production of edition of a text, a monograph, journal article, or a specific edition of a dictionary or an encyclopedia.
* Data are created by projects. They are in essence static (though they can be corrected or revised). Ideally they can be reused by other projects, either with or without negotiation (though this is in practice often very difficult). The preservation problem with data is hosting and discoverability. Examples of data might be photos, 3D scans, transcriptions, edited texts, editions of dictionaries or encyclopedias, monographs and journal articles, and so on.
* Resources are things that provide access to data: e.g. digital libraries, edition interfaces, dictionary or edition interfaces, and so on. These are things that may need to be actively maintained and updated if they are to remain useful. Examples of resources include encyclopedia or dictionary sites, journals, perhaps monograph series, scholarly societies, and so on.
If this makes sense, then I think the organisational issues are different in each case.
* With projects, the transfer is always going to be negotiated: you are talking about a small group of people who share a common goal and understanding of the project (more or less) and when a transfer happens, you are going to see a handoff: one leader or group hands off control to another under specific conditions. Projects are usually organised around a single leader, or a couple of co-leaders, or a small board. The problem for projects is really the same, whether the project is paper-based or digital.
* For data, you are looking for maintenance that is as hands off as possible and transfer that can happen without negotiation. The important question here is whether the data is discoverable, comprehensible, and accessible. Hence Peter's point about licencing, for example, and about institutional repositories or the Oxford Text Archive. For data, you don't really need a board or a chair or anything else (in fact if you need it, it is probably not being well stored). You need some institution that is already established and is willing to accept your data under conditions you both find acceptable as part of its mission. Universities and libraries are good methods for this. Again, the problem is not really too dissimilar between paper and digital: you want as much as possible to give your data in static form to an institution that is set up to preserve it.
* Resources are the hardest things to preserve, because there is no obvious end date, but they may require active intervention. Because of this, I think you should do everything you can to avoid creating them. If you are designing an edition, you should design it so that it degrades well over time and can be treated like data (whether as a whole or in its component parts). This means making use of components that are built into the architecture of the web as much as possible and separating content from processing. Good examples include Stuart Lee's edition of Ælfric's sermons, Murray McGillvray's Book of the Duchess, I'd argue my edition of Caedmon's Hymn, any post P2 version of the TEI. A famously poor example (though it isn't their fault) is the BBC's Domesday Project from the late 1980s. The exceptions to this rule are by-and-large not research projects: scholarly societies, for example, are resources rather than projects or data, but if they stop, it is because nobody is interested in them anymore. MESA is a resource that referees data. But if it dies, the data still survives. If you do build a resource (for example, a journal or a scholarly society), you should do everything you can to ensure that it degrades to data when people lose interest in it: so your journals should be hosted by or mirrored at universities and archives, for example, and should not depend too much on dynamic libraries for expression.
So in the end the answer to your question might be this: do everything you can to avoid creating a resource. Make sure that your data production is tied to a project rather than a resource and has a definite end-point in sight. If you want to create data that others will revise and add to after you are finished with it, don't try to be the arbiter of the quality of their interventions. Understand what they are doing as independent projects that are responsible for seeking their own quality assurance. Create URLs or other identifiers that archives can administer without your help. Publish guidelines and suggestions for how subsequent generations might add to your data, but give up on enforcing them.
In other words, try to imitate the Chaucer of the epilogue to Troilus and Criseyde ("go litel bok, go little myn tragedie") rather than the Chaucer of the epilogue to the Canterbury Tales ("...the whiche I revoke in my retracciouns").
On 13-06-21 03:51 PM, Michelson, David Allen wrote:
Dear Peter and others,
Thank you for these helpful responses.
I agree completely with your advice that one should seek out repositories and generally try to get the data freely in the hands of as many as possible. Daniel's point about DOIs is also very useful.
Having said that, these are advice about how to avoid extinction in the worst case scenario, e.g. when no one is actively curating, revising, or hosting the data and it is in danger of disappearing because in the short run there is no one to care.
I am curious about how to prepare for the best case scenario, e.g. a single scholar or small group of scholars create data files which are received by the scholarly community as of sufficient value to be crowd curated indefinitely. While the fact that the data will be CC-by means that the crowd will be free to do what it wants, from a pragmatic perspective it seems like it would still be useful to have an editorial board of sorts Joel mentioned in his post for the following reasons:
1. To offer scholarly peer review to the revisions to the data, in effect creating canonical revisions.
2. To curate guidelines and coordinate collaboration for this revision.
3. To own and administer the URL associated with the project (which is used for minting URIs, for redirecting to content repositories, and to serve as the single URL for finding the data).
4. To give some momentum to the project should interest wane for a period after the initial researchers have stopped intense work on the data.
I am very much aware and even happy with the fact that in a certain sense the work of this editorial board is non-binding since the data is open and people will do what they want with the data. At the same time, I believe that scholarly peer review is valuable.
So my question is, how do I structure this standing committee? Should it be based at a university, a publisher, through a scholarly society, as a formal non-profit corporation, as an informal agreement, etc?
In the past such multi-generation collaboration might have occurred through a press (various dictionaries for example) or through a scholarly society (long running translation or publication series) but I am wondering about how this model occurs in the digital age.
I would love to see examples from formal arrangements others have made if any.
Thank you!
David A. Michelson
Assistant Professor
Vanderbilt University
www.syriaca.org<http://www.syriaca.org>
From: Peter Robinson <P.M.Robinson(a)bham.ac.uk<mailto:P.M.Robinson@bham.ac.uk>>
Date: Friday, June 21, 2013 12:05 PM
To: David Michelson <david.a.michelson(a)vanderbilt.edu<mailto:david.a.michelson@vanderbilt.edu>>
Cc: "<dm-l(a)uleth.ca<mailto:dm-l@uleth.ca>>" <dm-l(a)uleth.ca<mailto:dm-l@uleth.ca>>
Subject: How to make your data live forever (and maybe your project?)
HI David
I think you are hitting upon a very sore point in the DH/editorial communities. We have had editorial projects launched all over the place, with great enthusiasm and often, substantial funding. Many now face exactly the problem you outline: what happens after the PI/institution move on?
So, here are three things you can do which will help immensely:
1. Explicitly declare all your materials as Creative Commons Share-alike attribution: that is, **without** the 'non-commercial' use restrictions so often (and wrongly) imposed by many projects.
2. Place the data, so licensed, on any open server. The Oxford Text Archive is, after so many years, still the best place I know to put your data.
That alone should be enough to make your data live forever. And wonderfully, these two options will cost you not a cent, and maybe just a few hours of your time to deal with the OTA deposit pack.
Optionally, you could also:
3. Place the data within an institutional repositiory. This gives you the option to use the IR tools to construct an interface, and provide basic search and other tools. In my mind, this option has been scandalously underused by DH projects, for reasons which might be the subject of another post. But this does provide the opportunity for you to present your project in a way that will connect its metadata with the whole world of OASIS etc tools, and offer a sustainable interface. The University of Birmingham Research Archive gives some idea of how this might work: see (for example) the entries for the Mingana collection (eg http://epapers.bham.ac.uk/84/) and Codex Sinaiticus ( http://epapers.bham.ac.uk/1690/).
There is another answer:
1. Keep the 'non-commercial' licence restriction on your data. You can thereby claim that you are allowing all your fellow academics to use it freely, while (if you choose) not actually making it freely available outside your interface.
2. Create an elaborate and very attractive interface to your data
3. Persuade your university, or someone, to set up a DH centre, with a minimum staff of a director and programmer, space and dedicated equipment (say, 100K a year if you can swing this with part-time staff etc). This DH centre will then have the task of maintaining your data (which of course, only the centre has), interface and project. This centre can then deal with all the issues you raise in your post.
4. Persuade your university, or someone, to support data, interface and project, in perpetuity
Well, good luck with that!
Peter
On 20 Jun 2013, at 23:28, Michelson, David Allen wrote:
Dear Colleagues,
I'd like to add a follow up question to this very informative discussion.
I am also in the process of building a DH sub-community for a specific disciplinary niche.
I would like to ask your advice on governance and standards.
I am looking for models and best practices to ensure long term sustainability of my collaborative DH project once it hopefully outgrows its incubation stage.
Could you please point me to long running DH projects whose protocols for governance, editorial oversight, institutional ownership/hosting I might emulate? I am thinking of medium sized DH projects as models, so bigger than one scholar publishing a digital project, but much smaller than the TEI consortium or Digital Medievalist.
Given the concerns over sustainability inherent in DH, I am also interested in advice on how to transition a project from the stage where a grant-funded PI is the leader in getting content online to where a volunteer editorial board (and institutional hosts) maintain a project longer term. Also, how do DH projects handle the preservation of content for such a project? The data will be licensed open source, but who should hold the copyright and renew the domain name after the project is launched? A university library? An s-corporation independent of any institution (like some non-profit scholarly journals or professional societies)? the public domain, the original scholarly contributors?
Please suggest links to examples to follow from existing projects if you are aware of them.
Thank you!
Dave
David A. Michelson
Assistant Professor
Vanderbilt University
www.syriaca.org
Digital Medievalist -- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
Journal: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/
Journal Editors: editors _AT_ digitalmedievalist.org<http://digitalmedievalist.org>
News: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/news/
Wiki: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/wiki/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/digitalmedieval
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Peter Robinson
Honorary Research Fellow, ITSEE, University of Birmingham, UK
Bateman Professor of English
9 Campus Drive, University of Saskatchewan
Saskatoon SK S7N 5A5, Canada
--
---
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Canada
+1 403 393-2539<tel:%2B1%20403%20393-2539>
Digital Medievalist -- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
Journal: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/
Journal Editors: editors _AT_ digitalmedievalist.org<http://digitalmedievalist.org>
News: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/news/
Wiki: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/wiki/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/digitalmedieval
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=49320313760
Discussion list: dm-l(a)uleth.ca<mailto:dm-l@uleth.ca>
Change list options: http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
I have a Twitter account, but I never write anything. I just read what the St Louis Post-Dispatch sports writers write there. I'm in agreement with Marjorie: I never read any blogs and I don't trust wikis.
On Jun 20, 2013, at 1:17 PM, Daniel O'Donnell <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca> wrote:
Marjorie! You are indeed old fashioned. No twitter? #getwiththeprogramme ;-)
On 13-06-20 12:15 PM, Marjorie Burghart wrote:
Dear Andreas,
Regarding an academic community, I would personally prefer
a) a mailing list to seriously discuss some topics, aided by
b) a facebook group for quick news and comments
I suppose I am very old fashioned, but mailing lists are my definitive favourites. Sorry, but I was born in the 20th c. ;)
- Blogs: I don't give a fig about blogs as a means of regular information. I do not follow any. Of course I read blog posts sometimes, when they are pointed out to me or when hey come up in a web search, but I do not *follow* any blog.
- Wiki sites: I just don't trust them.
- Social networks: you do have a point about the segmentation; I use Facebook a lot for both professional and personal contacts, and I have an academia.edu account, but I don't use it very actively and do not wish to have to follow news and posts on several networks.
- Bulletin boards: they work well for some communities, but I don't feel that academic communities have the right balance of news and debates to work well on BB.
- Twitter: not good for academic communities IMHO.
Interesting question, Andreas! :)
Marjorie
On 11 June 2013 16:03, Andreas Wagner <Andreas.Wagner(a)em.uni-frankfurt.de> wrote:
Dear list,
please forgive me for rushing in, but I have been having some difficulties in finding people with corresponding experiences and willingness to share their thoughts:
When planning to set up a platform on which an international and interdisciplinary community of humanities researchers (most probably not all versed in digital technologies) is invited to exchange their ideas, questions, announcements around a certain thematic focus consisting in a "historically localizable" discourse (in this case the so-called "School of Salamanca" of the 16th and 17th centuries), what type of platform would you prefer, and why? Blog, Mailing list, Bulletin Board, Wiki, ...?
How do you perceive access and participation thresholds, popularity/dissemination/visibility, feedback likelihood, etc?
To possibly provoke some comments, here are a few intuitions of mine. Please contradict and challenge (or confirm) based on your experiences, or your intuitions:
- Blogs are easily accessible and can be viewed/read comfortable, but they tend to have a restriced set of authors. Can anyone imagine applying for authorship rights to a blog administration in order to just pose one question or to advertise one conference?
- The same holds for wiki sites.
- Social networks like academia.edu, itergateway groups etc. depend on people to focus on one such network which might not be their favorite one, so a too large portion of interested persons is kept out.
- Bulletin Boards are a mess.
- Twitter messages are too short.
- Mailing lists are not subscribed to because they look old-fashioned. Being somewhat nerdy myself, they are my personal favorites, however.
On the other hand, when I have asked that same question on my facebook profile, the only response I did get was a suggestion to go for a blog. In other social networks or fora (academia.edu, community.itergateway.org, researchgate.net etc.) I did not get any reply at all (although some are watching/following the question).
I would be very grateful for any insights shared...
Best regards,
Andreas
--
Dr. Andreas Wagner
Project "The School of Salamanca"
Academy of Sciences and Literature, Mainz
and Institute of Philosophy
Goethe University Frankfurt
http://salamanca.adwmainz.de
Grüneburgplatz 1 (Pf 116, R. 2.455)
60629 Frankfurt am Main
Tel. +49 (0)69/798-32774
Digital Medievalist -- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
Journal: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/
Journal Editors: editors _AT_ digitalmedievalist.org
News: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/news/
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Discussion list: dm-l(a)uleth.ca
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Digital Medievalist -- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
Journal: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/
Journal Editors: editors _AT_ digitalmedievalist.org
News: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/news/
Wiki: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/wiki/
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Discussion list: dm-l(a)uleth.ca
Change list options: http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
--
---
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Canada
+1 403 393-2539
Digital Medievalist -- http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
Journal: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal/
Journal Editors: editors _AT_ digitalmedievalist.org
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Discussion list: dm-l(a)uleth.ca
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**** Please Cross Post ****
Hi all,
Global Outlook :: Digital Humanities, The University of Lethbridge, and
The Alliance of Digital Humanities Organisations is pleased to announce
the first Global Digital Humanities Essay Competition.
http://www.globaloutlookdh.org/global-outlookdigital-humanities-global-digi…
This is an open competition for research papers on the national,
regional, or international practice of the Digital Humanities--a broad
topic that has been designed to give authors the greatest possible
scope. Authors may write on individual projects or problems or broader
philosophical, geographical, sociological, political, or other aspects
of the practice of Digital Humanities in a global context. Papers
discussing the practice of DH by or with marginalised communities or in
areas that are currently less well represented by ADHO are particularly
welcome.
The competition is open to any interested party including students,
graduate students, junior faculty, and researchers unaffiliated with a
university or research institution. We would like to especially
encourage submissions from students, junior and unaffiliated
researchers, and authors belonging to marginalised communities or
communities currently less well represented by ADHO.
The competition is offering a minimum of 4 prizes of $500 (CAD) each.
Initial selection (for a prize of $200) is by abstract/proposal. A
further $300 will be awarded to the authors of the winning abstracts
upon satisfactory completion of a full-length paper based on their
original proposal. All submissions will be eligible for review and
publication in the ADHO journal, Digital Studies/Le champ numérique
(http://digitalstudies.org/).
For further information about the competition, please see the
competition web page:
http://www.globaloutlookdh.org/global-outlookdigital-humanities-global-digi….
The competition organisers can also be contacted by email at
prizes(a)globaloutlookdh.org
The initial deadline (abstracts/proposals) is June 30, 2013.
-Daniel Paul O'Donnell
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell
Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Canada
+1 403 393-2539
Dear list,
please forgive me for rushing in, but I have been having some
difficulties in finding people with corresponding experiences and
willingness to share their thoughts:
When planning to set up a platform on which an international and
interdisciplinary community of humanities researchers (most probably not
all versed in digital technologies) is invited to exchange their ideas,
questions, announcements around a certain thematic focus consisting in a
"historically localizable" discourse (in this case the so-called "School
of Salamanca" of the 16th and 17th centuries), what type of platform
would you prefer, and why? Blog, Mailing list, Bulletin Board, Wiki,
...?
How do you perceive access and participation thresholds,
popularity/dissemination/visibility, feedback likelihood, etc?
To possibly provoke some comments, here are a few intuitions of mine.
Please contradict and challenge (or confirm) based on your experiences,
or your intuitions:
- Blogs are easily accessible and can be viewed/read comfortable, but
they tend to have a restriced set of authors. Can anyone imagine
applying for authorship rights to a blog administration in order to
just pose one question or to advertise one conference?
- The same holds for wiki sites.
- Social networks like academia.edu, itergateway groups etc. depend on
people to focus on one such network which might not be their favorite
one, so a too large portion of interested persons is kept out.
- Bulletin Boards are a mess.
- Twitter messages are too short.
- Mailing lists are not subscribed to because they look old-fashioned.
Being somewhat nerdy myself, they are my personal favorites, however.
On the other hand, when I have asked that same question on my facebook
profile, the only response I did get was a suggestion to go for a blog.
In other social networks or fora (academia.edu,
community.itergateway.org, researchgate.net etc.) I did not get any
reply at all (although some are watching/following the question).
I would be very grateful for any insights shared...
Best regards,
Andreas
--
Dr. Andreas Wagner
Project "The School of Salamanca"
Academy of Sciences and Literature, Mainz
and Institute of Philosophy
Goethe University Frankfurt
http://salamanca.adwmainz.de
Grüneburgplatz 1 (Pf 116, R. 2.455)
60629 Frankfurt am Main
Tel. +49 (0)69/798-32774
Dear colleagues,
This is a reminder to say that the call for nomination for the DM board
will close on Wed June 19. Please let Orietta Da Rold (odr1(a)leicester.ac.uk)
and Takako Kato (TakakoKato123(a)gmail.com) have names of the nominees by
this week Wed.
Thanks and best wishes,
Takako and Orietta
On 6 June 2013 12:36, Takako Kato <takakokato123(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Dear colleagues,
>
> Digital Medievalist will be holding elections at the end of June for four
> positions to its Executive Board. Board positions are for two year terms
> and incumbents may be re-elected (for a maximum of three terms in a row).
> Members of the Board are responsible for the overall direction of the
> organisation and leading the Digital Medievalist's many projects and
> programmes. This is a working board, and so it would be expected that you
> are willing and able to commit a little bit of time to helping Digital
> Medievalist undertake some of its activities
> (such as helping to run its its journal, conference sessions, etc.). For
> further information about the Executive and Digital Medievalist more
> generally please see the DM website, particularly:
>
> - http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/about.html
> - http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/bylaws.html
>
> We are now seeking nominations (including self-nominations) for the annual
> elections. In order to be eligible for election, candidates must be
> members of Digital Medievalist (membership is conferred simply by
> subscription to the organisation's mailing list, dm-l) and have made some
> demonstrable contribution either to the DM project (e.g. to the mailing
> list, or the wiki, etc.), or generally to the field of digital medieval
> studies.
>
> If you are interested in running for these positions or are able to
> recommend a suitable candidate, please contact the returning officers,
> Orietta Da Rold (odr1(a)leicester.ac.uk) and Takako Kato (
> TakakoKato123(a)gmail.com <takako.kato(a)gmail.com>), who will treat your
> nomination or enquiries in confidence. The nomination period will close
> at 0000 UTC on Wed June 19 and elections will be held by electronic
> ballot through the whole of the week starting 1 July, 2013.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Orietta and Takako
>
--
--------------------------
Dr Takako Kato
TakakoKato123(a)gmail.com
TKato(a)dmu.ac.uk
School of Humanities
Clephan Building
De Montfort University
Leicester LE1 9BH, UK
+44 (0)116 270 8265