(Apologies for cross-posting)
The Digital Humanities group at the University of Vienna is looking for a DH programmer / developer from May 2018 or as soon as possible thereafter. The post can be either full-time or half-time. It is limited to 4 years 11 months in the first instance, but with a possibility of being made permanent. Application deadline is 10 March.
The job involves both writing new programs and tools to support the various projects of DH @ Uni Wien, and helping to maintain existing ones (e.g. Stemmaweb, Neo4J-based digital editions and digital prosopography, geographic visualisations of the medieval Near Eastern and Arabic world.)
More information and instructions on how to apply can be found here: https://univis.univie.ac.at/ausschreibungstellensuche/flow/bew_ausschreibun… <https://univis.univie.ac.at/ausschreibungstellensuche/flow/bew_ausschreibun…>
Best wishes,
Tara Andrews
--
Univ.-Prof. Dr. Tara L Andrews
Digital Humanities
Institut für Geschichte, Universität Wien
Universitätsring 1, A-1010 Wien
Dear Listmembers,
When designing historical maps spanning several centuries, we faced
serious difficulties to consistently show the different categories of
political entities in view of the evolution of political ideas.
That is why, we are currently trying to work out an impartial and
consistent solution allowing to depict all kind of polities throughout
history regardless of the ideas of the time, as a formal model which in
reality goes beyond the simple stage of historical geography.
Thus we published the draft A FORMAL MODEL FOR HISTORICAL ATLASES AND
HISTORICAL KNOWLEDGE which is the first part of our research.
https://www.academia.edu/s/af65884c0f/a-formal-model-for-historical-atlases…
In the second step, we will define precisely the criteria for assigning
properties to objects.
Persons interested can receive an invitation code in order to create
their own graph in our model.
Sincerely
________________________________________
Christos Nüssli
www.euratlas.org
The Digital Classicist invites proposals for the summer 2018 seminar series, which will run on Friday afternoons in June and July in the Institute of Classical Studies, Senate House, London.
We would like to see papers that address the tension between standardisation and customisation in digital and other innovative and collaborative classics research. The seminar encompasses all areas of classics, including ancient history, archaeology and reception (including cultures beyond the Mediterranean). Papers from researchers of all levels, including students and professional practitioners, are welcome.
There is a budget to assist with travel to London (usually from within the UK, but we have occasionally been able to assist international presenters to attend). To submit a paper, please email an abstract of up to 300 words as an attachment to valeria.vitale(a)sas.ac.uk by Monday, March 19th, 2018.
==
Dr Gabriel BODARD
Reader in Digital Classics
Institute of Classical Studies
University of London
Senate House
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU
E: Gabriel.bodard(a)sas.ac.uk
T: +44 (0)20 78628752
http://digitalclassicist.org/
Digital Humanities in the Nordic Countries conference (DHN 2018),
Helsinki 7-9 March 2018
1. Conference programme published
The programme of the Digital Humanities in the Nordic Countries
conference (DHN 2018), 7-9 March 2018, Helsinki is now published:
https://www.conftool.net/dhn2018/sessions.php
2. Conference registration
We have already 200 participants signed up for DHN 2018. If you want to
join us, get your place now:
http://heldig.fi/dhn-2018/registration-accommodation
3. Open Science workshops
In conjuction with the DHN 2018 we are organising Open Science workshops
at Tiedekulma on 9 March 2018. More information and registration:
http://heldig.fi/dhn-2018/open-science-workshops-of-the-dhn2018
4. Digital & Critical Friday at Tiedekulma
If you cannot attend the full DHN 2018 conference, but you happen to be
in Helsinki at the time, you can join us for Digital & Critical Friday
at Tiedekulma on 9 March 2018. The event is open to everyone! More
information:
http://heldig.fi/dhn-2018/digital-critical-friday-at-tiedekulma
Best regards,
Jouni Tuominen, on behalf of the Local organising committee
--
Jouni Tuominen, Coordinating researcher
Helsinki Centre for Digital Humanities (HELDIG)
University of Helsinki and Aalto University
HELDIG: Room A130, Metsätalo, Unioninkatu 40, Helsinki
Aalto: Room B126, Computer Science Building, Konemiehentie 2, Espoo
http://seco.cs.aalto.fi/u/jwtuomin/
Voting for DH Awards is open!
DH Awards 2017 is open for voting at:
http://dhawards.org/dhawards2017/voting/ until the end of 25 February 2018.
Versions of this announcement in Chinese (Traditional and Simplified),
French, Japanese, Portuguese, and Spanish are available from the website.
Digital Humanities Awards are a set of entirely open annual awards run as a
DH awareness raising activity. The awards are nominated and voted for
entirely by the public. These awards are intended to help put interesting
DH resources in the spotlight and engage DH users (and general public) in
the work of the community. Although the working language of DH Awards is
English, nominations may be for any resource in any language. Awards are
not specific to geography, language, conference, organization or field of
humanities. There is no financial prize associated with these community
awards. There were many nominations and the international nominations
committee (http://dhawards.org/dhawards2017/committee/) reviewed each
nomination. We’re sorry if your nomination was not included, or changed
category, all decisions are final once voting opens. Please see
http://dhawards.org/dhawards2017/faqs for this and other frequently asked
questions.
Anyone is allowed to vote, yes anyone, but please only vote once.
Please cast vote by looking at the nominations and following the link to
voting form at http://dhawards.org/dhawards2017/voting/ before midnight
(GMT) on 25 February 2018 when voting will be closed.
Good luck!
Best wishes,
James
--
Dr James Cummings, James.Cummings(a)newcastle.ac.uk
School of English Literature, Language, and Linguistics, Newcastle
University
Dear friends,
The Medieval Academy of America will be meeting in Philadelphia at the University of Pennsylvania on March 7-9, 2019. Our theme is the “Global Turn in Medieval Studies,” though proposals may be submitted on any topic. We are especially hoping to attract proposals for papers, sessions, workshops, roundtables, etc from the medievalists working in all aspects of the digital humanities. Please consider submitting! See below for the CFP.
Best,
Lynn
From: The Medieval Academy of America [mailto:info@themedievalacademy.org]
Sent: Friday, February 02, 2018 12:50 PM
To: Ransom, Lynn
Subject: 2019 Annual Meeting Call for Papers
<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=0013Q95gXOB6H2UGasg5MibpCUWnIxvZ_Fc2SmTPGRFz89x…>[MAA logo]<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=0013Q95gXOB6H2UGasg5MibpCUWnIxvZ_Fc2SmTPGRFz89x…><http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=0013Q95gXOB6H2UGasg5MibpCUWnIxvZ_Fc2SmTPGRFz89x…>
The Medieval Academy of America
1 February 2018
2019 Annual Meeting Call for Papers
The 94th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America will take place in Philadelphia on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania, from 7-9 March 2019. The meeting is jointly hosted by the Medieval Academy of America, Bryn Mawr College, Delaware Valley Medieval Association, Haverford College, St. Joseph's University, the University of Pennsylvania, and Villanova University.
The Global Turn in Medieval Studies: Medievalists across various disciplines are taking a more geographically and methodologically global approach to the study of the Middle Ages. While the Organizing Committee invites proposals for papers on all topics and in all disciplines and periods of medieval studies, this year's conference spotlights the "global turn" in medieval studies. To this end, we encourage session and paper proposals that treat the Middle Ages as a broad historical and cultural phenomenon, encompassing the full extent of Europe as well as the Middle East, southern and eastern Asia, Africa, and beyond. We also invite proposals that explore departures from traditional teleological discourses rooted in national interests, ones that apply disciplinary and interdisciplinary methods to study a broad array of subjects.
The full call for papers is available here<http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=0013Q95gXOB6H2UGasg5MibpCUWnIxvZ_Fc2SmTPGRFz89x…>.
The Medieval Academy of America, 17 Dunster St., Suite 202, Cambridge, MA 02138
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*Global Digital Humanities Symposium*
*March 22-23, 2018*
Main Library, Green Room
Michigan State University
East Lansing, Michigan
msuglobaldh.org
#msuglobaldh
*Keynote speakers:*
Schuyler Esprit <http://schuyleresprit.com/esprit/> (Dominica State College)
Lisa Nakamura <https://lisanakamura.net/> (University of Michigan)
*Registration is still open!*
Please register by: Friday, March 9
Free and open to the public. Register at http://msuglobaldh.org/registr
ation/
Digital Humanities at Michigan State University is proud to continue its
symposium series on Global DH into its third year. We are delighted to
feature speakers from around the world, as well as expertise and work from
faculty and students at Michigan State University in this two day
symposium.
*Program and Schedule*
Thursday, March 22, 2018
- 1:00-1:30 - Opening Remarks
- 1:30-1:55 - Infrastructure for the Digital (Lightning Talks)
- Introducing the Oxford-BYU Syriac Corpus: An Archive for the
Preservation of Syriac Texts, James Walters, Rochester College
- Bringing Arabic-Language Scholarly Content Online: An
Investigation, John Kiplinger and Anne Ray, JSTOR
- The Humanities Scholars Today: New Directions for Academic
Libraries in Nigeria, Yetunde Zaid and Adebambo Oduwole, University of
Lagos and Lagos State University, Nigeria
- 2:15-2:40 - Critique with/of the Digital (Lightning Talks)
- Syed Affan Aslam and Abdul Wahid Khan, Habib University
- Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story: Claiming Space for the
Air India Digital Archive, Arun Jacob, McMaster University
- Letters from Africa: Using a Digital Humanities Approach to Examine
African and American Relationships During Decolonization, Elisabeth
McMahon, Tulane University
- 3:00-3:30 - Pedagogy in/of the Digital (Lightning Talks)
- Mapping Lusofonia: Integrating GIS Instruction into Foreign
Language Curricula, Pamela Espinosa de los Monteros, Joshua Sadvari, and
Maria Scheid, Ohio State University
- Toward a Rubric-Based Assessment of Global Digital Tools and
Pedagogies: Taking a closer look at Mandarin Tone Learning Apps, Yilang
Zhao and Catherine Ryu, MSU
- Tuning in: A Digital Soundscape of Mandarin Chinese Tones, Benjamin
Fuhrman and Catherine Ryu, MSU
- Beyond the Classroom: Maps, Texts and Multimedia to Make Visible
the Afro Presence in Argentina, Marisol Fila, University of Michigan
- Storytelling and Social Media: Tackling the Digital Divide, Autumn
Painter and Marcy O’Neil, MSU
- 4:30-5:30 - Keynote, Lisa Nakamura
- 5:30-7:30 - Reception
Friday, March 23, 2018
- 9:00-10:30 - Environmental DH Panel
- Supporting Research, Public Engagement, and Learning Through
Environmentally Focused Digital Humanities, Jamie Rogers, Florida
International University
- #EcoDH: Global Environmental Digital Humanities, Amanda Starling
Gould, libi rose striegl, Craig Dietrich, Ted Dawson, Max Symuleski, Duke
University, UC Boulder, Occidental College, and Vanderbilt
- 11:00-12:15 - Creating Community
- Colonial Pasts and Techno-Utopian Futures, Dhanashree Thorat,
University of Kansas
- Exploring Culture and Identity using Linked Open Data and the
Digital Index of North American Archaeology (DINAA), Taylor Wiley
(presenting), Joshua Wells, Eric Kansa, Kelsey Noack Myers, and R. Carl
DeMuth, Indiana University South Bend, Open Context, and Indiana
University
Bloomington
- Digital Community Engagement at SIUE: How a Regional University can
have a Global Impact, Katherine Knowles and Benjamin Ostermeier, The IRIS
Center at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
- Partnering for Digital Publishing: Resurfacing At-Risk Works of the
Small, Independent, Feminist Press, Jane Nichols and Elle Bublitz, Oregon
State University Libraries and Calyx Press
- 12:15-1:30 - Lunch (provided)
- 1:30-2:30 - Language and Meaning
- Mercator of the Trap: Black Orality and the Naming of Place in the Hip
Hop Soundscape, Melissa Brown, University of Maryland
- Visualizing Claude McKay’s Black Atlantic, Amardeep Singh, Lehigh
University
- Urban Language Topographies: Cites as Sites of Language
Maintenance, Michelle McSweeney, Columbia University
- 3:00-4:15 - Mapping and the Geo-Spatial
- West Hollywood Goes Global: Exploring Queer Identity on GeoCities,
Sarah McTavish, University of Waterloo
- Digital Tools, Grassroots Use: Open Source Mapping Communities and
Global Knowledge Production, Ned Prutzer, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign
- Migrant Segregation in Victorian England: Geo-Spatial Technologies
and Individual-Level Data Harmonisation, James Perry, Lancaster University
- 4:45-5:45 - Keynote: Schuyler Esprit
- 5:45-6:00 - Closing remarks
Kristen Mapes
Digital Humanities Coordinator
College of Arts and Letters
Michigan State University
kristenmapes.com
kmapes(a)msu.edu
kmapes86(a)gmail.com