*Global Digital Humanities Symposium at Michigan State University*
*March 22-23, 2018*
*We are committed to bringing a wide-ranging and diverse group of
participants and presenters for our conference. To further this end, there
will be funds available to assist or offset the costs of travel. There is
an option to request consideration for travel funds in the proposal form.
If you have any questions, please email dh(a)msu.edu <dh(a)msu.edu>.*
*Call for Proposals* Deadline to submit a proposal: Friday, December 15,
11:59pm EST
msuglobaldh.org
Digital Humanities at Michigan State University is proud to extend its
symposium series on Global DH into its third year. Digital humanities
scholarship continues to be driven by work at the intersections of a range
of distinct disciplines and an ethical commitment to preserve and broaden
access to cultural materials. The most engaged global DH scholarship, that
which MSU champions
<http://cplong.org/2016/10/critical-diversity-in-a-digital-age/>, values
digital tools that enhance the capacity of scholarly critique to reflect a
broad range of literary, historical, new media, and cultural positions, and
diverse ways of valuing cultural production and knowledge work.
Particularly valuable are strategies in which the digital form manifests a
critical perspective on the digital content and the position of the
researcher to their material.
With the growth of the digital humanities, particularly in under-resourced
and underrepresented areas, a number of complex issues surface, including,
among others, questions of ownership, cultural theft, virtual exploitation,
digital rights, endangered data <http://endangereddataweek.org/>, and the
digital divide. We view the 2018 symposium as an opportunity to broaden the
conversation about these issues. Scholarship that works across borders with
foci on transnational partnerships and globally accessible data is
especially welcome.
Michigan State University has been intentionally global
<http://www.isp.msu.edu/about/about-isp/> for more than 60 years, with over
1,400 faculty involved in international research, teaching, and service.
For the past 20 years, MSU has developed a strong research area in
culturally engaged, global digital humanities. Matrix
<http://www2.matrix.msu.edu/>, a digital humanities and social science
center at MSU, has done dozens of digital projects in West and Southern
Africa
<http://www2.matrix.msu.edu/portfolio_categories/africa-related-projects/>
that have focused on ethical and reciprocal relationships and capacity
building. WIDE <http://wide.msu.edu> has set best practices for doing
community engaged, international, archival work with the Samaritan
Collections, Archive 2.0
<http://www2.matrix.msu.edu/portfolio-item/samaritan-archive-2-0/>. Today
many scholars in the humanities at MSU are engaged in digital projects
relating to global, indigenous, and/or underrepresented groups and topics.
This symposium, which will include a mixture of presentation types,
welcomes 300-word proposals related to any of these issues, and
particularly on the following themes and topics by *Friday, December 15,
11:59pm EST:*
- Critical cultural studies and analytics
- Cultural heritage in a range of contexts
- DH as socially engaged humanities and/or as a social movement
- Open data, open access, and data preservation as resistance,
especially in a postcolonial context
- DH responses to crisis
- How identity categories, and their intersections, shape digital
humanities work
- Global research dialogues and collaborations
- Indigeneity – anywhere in the world – and the digital
- Digital humanities, postcolonialism, and neocolonialism
- Global digital pedagogies
- Borders, migration, and/or diaspora and their connection to the digital
- Digital and global languages and literatures
- The state of global digital humanities community
- Digital humanities, the environment, and climate change
- Innovative and emergent technologies across institutions, languages,
and economies
- Scholarly communication and knowledge production in a global context
*Presentation Formats:*
- 3-5-minute lightning talk
- 15-minute presentation
- 90-minute workshop
- 90-minute panel
*Proposal form*: http://www.msuglobaldh.org/submit-a-proposal/
Kristen Mapes
Digital Humanities Coordinator
College of Arts and Letters
Michigan State University
kristenmapes.com
kmapes(a)msu.edu
kmapes86(a)gmail.com
**apologies for cross posting**
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
7th AIUCD Conference 2018
Cultural Heritage in the Digital Age. Memory, Humanities and Technologies
Bari 31/1-2/02 2018
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Associazione per l’Informatica Umanistica e le Culture Digitali
(AIUCD, Italian Association for Digital Humanities and Digital
Cultures) is pleased to announce the seventh edition of its annual
conference. Registration to the conference is open through Conftool at
https://www.conftool.net/aiucd2018.
The AIUCD2018 Conference will take place from January 31th to February
2nd in Bari, Italy, and it is organized by Università di Bari "Aldo
Moro" (Piazza Cesare Battisti, 1, 70121 Bari),
The main topic of AIUCD2018 is Cultural Heritage in the Digital Age.
Memory, Humanities and Technologies. Keynote speakers: Prof. Paola Buzi
(Università di Roma Sapienza); Prof. Riccardo Pozzo (Università di Verona).
For more details on registration fees, organization and local infos,
please visit the Conference website http://www.aiucd2018.uniba.it or
send an email to aiucd2018(a)aiucd.it <mailto:aiucd2018@aiucd.it>
NB. For fiscal and legal reasons the registration to the conference
includes the annual membership to AIUCD and to EADH (AIUCD is EADH
Associated Partner).
--
Roberto Rosselli Del Turco roberto.rossellidelturco at unito.it
Dip. di Studi Umanistici roberto.rossellidelturco at fileli.unipi.it
Universita' di Torino VBD: http://vbd.humnet.unipi.it/beta2/
EVT: http://bit.ly/24D9kdE VC: http://www.visionarycross.org/
Hige sceal the heardra, heorte the cenre,
mod sceal the mare, the ure maegen litlath. (Maldon 312-3)
<shamelessPlug>Holidays in Tuscany http://www.imoricci.it/</shamelessPlug>
We are glad to announce the publication of the latest (3rd) edition of this resource:
M. Jeffreys et al., Prosopography of the Byzantine World, 2016 (King's College London, 2017) available at http://pbw2016.kdl.kcl.ac.uk.
ISBN: 978-1-908951-20-5
Do please encourage your librarian to add it to the library catalogue.
--------------------------------------
Professor Charlotte Roueché
Department of Classics/Centre for Hellenic Studies
King’s College
London WC2R 2LS
fax + 44 20.7848 2545
charlotte.roueche(a)kcl.ac.uk<mailto:charlotte.roueche@kcl.ac.uk>
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3606-2049
With apologies for cross-posting
1. NUME, Research Group on the Latin Middle Ages, organizes the IV Cycle of Medieval Studies, June 2018.
2. The goal is to offer a broad overview of the current situation of Italian and international medievalist studies. Issues which are related to many different aspects of the medieval period (V-XV century) can be addressed: history, philosophy, politics, literature, art, archeology, material culture, new technologies applied to medieval studies and so on;
2.1 Contributions with two or more speakers are accepted;
2.2 Contributions will be structured in specific panels.
3. The conference will be held from 3rd to 7th June 2018 at the Auditorium Ente Cassa di Risparmio di Firenze, via Folco Portinari, 5 (Florence, Italy).
4. Participation proposals must have abstract format, in Italian or English, not exceeding 300 words. They will have to be sent, along with a CV, by January 15, 2018 at the following e-mail address:
info(a)nuovomedioevo.it
5. Proposals will be evaluated by the Review Board on the basis of quality, interest and originality. The judgment of the Commission will be unquestionable.
6. The Commission will notify the convocation for the speakers considered suitable by February 1, 2018.
7. The selected speakers will be asked to prepare an oral intervention, accompanied by any images or videos, not exceeding 15 minutes (+5’ discussion time). Contextually, they will be asked to send a paper of their contribution for the Conference Proceedings by April 1, 2018.
8. Speakers will be required a participation fee of 100€, which, in addition to supporting the activities of the NUME Research Group, will entitle to 2 free copies of the Conference Proceedings.
9. The Conference program will be published by April 30, 2018.
10. The deadlines set out in this notice must be strictly observed, otherwise the contribution will be excluded from the call.
Further information at: www.nuovomedioevo.it
Global Digital Humanities Symposium at Michigan State University
March 22-23, 2018
We are committed to bringing a wide-ranging and diverse group of
participants and presenters for our conference. To further this end, there
will be funds available to assist or offset the costs of travel. Further
details will be forthcoming soon, but please email us [dh(a)msu.edu] with any
questions or clarification.
*Call for Proposals* Deadline to submit a proposal: Friday, December 15,
11:59pm EST
msuglobaldh.org
Digital Humanities at Michigan State University is proud to extend its
symposium series on Global DH into its third year. Digital humanities
scholarship continues to be driven by work at the intersections of a range
of distinct disciplines and an ethical commitment to preserve and broaden
access to cultural materials. The most engaged global DH scholarship, that
which MSU champions
<http://cplong.org/2016/10/critical-diversity-in-a-digital-age/>, values
digital tools that enhance the capacity of scholarly critique to reflect a
broad range of literary, historical, new media, and cultural positions, and
diverse ways of valuing cultural production and knowledge work.
Particularly valuable are strategies in which the digital form manifests a
critical perspective on the digital content and the position of the
researcher to their material.
With the growth of the digital humanities, particularly in under-resourced
and underrepresented areas, a number of complex issues surface, including,
among others, questions of ownership, cultural theft, virtual exploitation,
digital rights, endangered data <http://endangereddataweek.org/>, and the
digital divide. We view the 2018 symposium as an opportunity to broaden the
conversation about these issues. Scholarship that works across borders with
foci on transnational partnerships and globally accessible data is
especially welcome.
Michigan State University has been intentionally global
<http://www.isp.msu.edu/about/about-isp/> for more than 60 years, with over
1,400 faculty involved in international research, teaching, and service.
For the past 20 years, MSU has developed a strong research area in
culturally engaged, global digital humanities. Matrix
<http://www2.matrix.msu.edu/>, a digital humanities and social science
center at MSU, has done dozens of digital projects in West and Southern
Africa
<http://www2.matrix.msu.edu/portfolio_categories/africa-related-projects/>
that have focused on ethical and reciprocal relationships and capacity
building. WIDE <http://wide.msu.edu> has set best practices for doing
community engaged, international, archival work with the Samaritan
Collections, Archive 2.0
<http://www2.matrix.msu.edu/portfolio-item/samaritan-archive-2-0/>. Today
many scholars in the humanities at MSU are engaged in digital projects
relating to global, indigenous, and/or underrepresented groups and topics.
This symposium, which will include a mixture of presentation types,
welcomes 300-word proposals related to any of these issues, and
particularly on the following themes and topics by *Friday, December 15,
11:59pm EST:*
- Critical cultural studies and analytics
- Cultural heritage in a range of contexts
- DH as socially engaged humanities and/or as a social movement
- Open data, open access, and data preservation as resistance,
especially in a postcolonial context
- DH responses to crisis
- How identity categories, and their intersections, shape digital
humanities work
- Global research dialogues and collaborations
- Indigeneity – anywhere in the world – and the digital
- Digital humanities, postcolonialism, and neocolonialism
- Global digital pedagogies
- Borders, migration, and/or diaspora and their connection to the digital
- Digital and global languages and literatures
- The state of global digital humanities community
- Digital humanities, the environment, and climate change
- Innovative and emergent technologies across institutions, languages,
and economies
- Scholarly communication and knowledge production in a global context
*Presentation Formats:*
- 3-5-minute lightning talk
- 15-minute presentation
- 90-minute workshop
- 90-minute panel
*Proposal form*: http://www.msuglobaldh.org/submit-a-proposal/
Kristen Mapes
Digital Humanities Coordinator
College of Arts and Letters
Michigan State University
kristenmapes.com
kmapes(a)msu.edu
kmapes86(a)gmail.com
The editors of Manuscript Studies: A Journal of the Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies at the University of Pennsylvania are pleased to make the following announcements:
* The Fall 2017 issue is out! A list of contents and article abstracts are available here: https://mss.pennpress.org/current-issue-abstracts
* The Spring 2018 special issue will be devoted to the Galen Palimpsest Project. Don't know what this project is? Subscribe to find out!
* We are seeking submissions for the Fall 2018 issue and beyond. Peer-reviewed articles for Fall 2018 are due soon (next week at the latest), but non-peer reviewed Annotations can be submitted up to February 1, 2018.
* Thanks to a generous agreement with the University of Pennsylvania Press, all Articles and Annotations in Manuscript Studies are made available on an open access basis after one year from the date of publication. Articles and Annotations from the 2016 Spring and Fall issues are now available for downloading and sharing on Penn's Scholarly Commons repository. To access the pdfs, go to: http://repository.upenn.edu/mss_sims/
Manuscript Studies brings together scholarship from around the world and across disciplines related to the study of pre-modern manuscript books and documents. This peer-reviewed journal is open to contributions that rely on both traditional methodologies of manuscript study and those that explore the potential of new ones. We publish articles that engage in a larger conversation on manuscript culture and its continued relevance in today's world and highlight the value of manuscript evidence in understanding our shared cultural and intellectual heritage. Studies that incorporate digital methodologies to further understanding of the physical and conceptual structures of the manuscript book are encouraged. A separate section, entitled Annotations, features research in progress and digital project reports.
For more information and to subscribe, go to http://mss.pennpress.org. For direct inquiries, please don't hesitate to contact the editors at sims-mss(a)pobox.upenn.edu<mailto:sims-mss@pobox.upenn.edu> .
The University of Iceland offers two international graduate programs in medieval studies:
(1) Medieval Icelandic Studies, a three-semester (90 ECTS) graduate program, with two semesters' (60 ECTS) worth of course work and one semester's worth (30 ECTS) master's thesis. The summer semester is the thesis semester, which means that the program can be completed in 13 months.
See http://english.hi.is/school_of_humanities/faculty_of_icelandic_and_comparat… <http://english.hi.is/school_of_humanities/faculty_of_icelandic_and_comparat…>
(2) Viking and Medieval Norse Studies, a four-semester (120 ECTS) graduate program run in cooperation with the University of Oslo in Norway, Aarhus University and Copenhagen University in Denmark. The first year--60 ECTS' worth of course work--take place in Iceland, but the third semester is spent either in Oslo, Aarhus, or Copenhagen, completing 30 ECTS of courses. The fourth semester is devoted to writing the master's thesis, and can be spent in Iceland or Oslo.
See http://oldnorse.is/ <http://oldnorse.is/>
Both programs are designed specifically for international students. The language of instruction is English.
Application deadline: February 1st, 2018
---------------------
Haraldur Bernharðsson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Medieval Studies
University of Iceland -- The Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies
Árnagarði við Suðurgötu
IS-101 Reykjavík
I C E L A N D
+ 354 525-4023 / +354 891-7511
- haraldr(a)hi.is <mailto:haraldr@hi.is>
- https://uni.hi.is/haraldr/en/ <https://uni.hi.is/haraldr/en/>
- Skype: haraldur_bernhardsson
---------------------
EVT 2 beta 1, aka "The Halloween release", is available for download
with many new features: improved support for critical editions (critical
apparatus also available in a dedicated text frame, apparatus fontium,
support for multiple recensions), initial support for named entities,
initial support for a working area, and more. As for previous versions
the starting point is a TEI P5 document holding your critical or
diplomatic edition, support for the latter is still incomplete since the
EVT 1 features porting is currently under way.
Full announcement available here:
https://visualizationtechnology.wordpress.com/2017/10/31/evt-2-beta-1-avail…
As usual, the latest archive can be downloaded from SourceForge:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/evt-project/files/
Let us know what you think of this release! please send all comments,
suggestions, bug reports, etc. to evt.developers(a)gmail.com.
R
--
Roberto Rosselli Del Turco roberto.rossellidelturco at unito.it
Dip. di Studi Umanistici roberto.rossellidelturco at fileli.unipi.it
Universita' di Torino VBD: http://vbd.humnet.unipi.it/beta2/
EVT: http://bit.ly/24D9kdE VC: http://www.visionarycross.org/
Hige sceal the heardra, heorte the cenre,
mod sceal the mare, the ure maegen litlath. (Maldon 312-3)
<shamelessPlug>Holidays in Tuscany http://www.imoricci.it/</shamelessPlug>