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-- Apologies for X-postings --
Hello all,
Just sharing some updates about the Data To Power Mapping system that we have just launched at the 2022 Data for Policy Conference in Hong Kong.
Data To Power mapping app is now ready to be used for data-intense research, mapping, and data visualization tasks for different projects.
Check out a short video Data To Power demo here<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dO32K4dq2LY>.
Please, get in touch if you are interested in exploring how the mapping system could be used to help with your own research projects!
Looking forward to receiving your feedback and ideas for exciting collaborations.
With warm season's greetings,
Dr Natalia Grincheva
Programme Leader, BA(Hons) Arts Management
University of the Arts Singapore &
Senior Research Fellow (Hon), Digital Studio
The University of Melbourne
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Dear colleagues,
The Global Digital Humanities Symposium Planning Committee has extended the deadline to submit proposals to the end of the day, Monday, December 5.
Further details about the event (virtual on March 13-15, 2023 and in-person at Michigan State University on March 17, 2023) are below.
The Call for Proposals is available in English, Spanish, and Mandarin Chinese (links below), and proposals and presentations are welcome in any of these three languages. During the Virtual Symposium, we will support live interpretation of presentations, as well as live captions for presentations in English. Further details about multilingualism at the Symposium are available in the CFP.
The updated deadline to apply: Monday, December 5, 2022, midnight in your timezone
Full CFP - English - https://msuglobaldh.org/call-for-proposals-english/
Full CFP - Español - https://msuglobaldh.org/call-for-proposals-espagnol/
Full CFP - 中文 - https://msuglobaldh.org/call-for-proposals-chinese/
This year we especially anticipate and welcome presentations on the following topics:
* Digital rights, advocacy, and activism
* Digital storytelling
* Anti-colonial digital humanities
* Digital humanities, the environment, and sustainability
We are always interested to hear about the following topics:
* Digital Humanities approaches to the global pandemics and issues of healthcare
* Indigeneity – anywhere in the world – and the digital
* Surveillance, censorship, and/or data privacy in a global context
* Productive failure; failure as a part of DH praxis
* Cultural heritage in a range of contexts, particularly non-Western
* Open data, open access, and data preservation as resistance
* Global digital pedagogies and emerging technologies
* Equity and inclusion in digital access
* Borders, migration, and/or diasporas and their connections to the digital
* Multilingualism and the digital
* Global research dialogues and collaborations
Presentation formats vary for the Virtual and the In-Person Symposium. See the full CFP for details.
Keynote presentations during the virtual symposium will be as follows: Thenmozhi Soundararajan (Equity Labs) and Elaine Gan (Wesleyan University) will each give keynote presentations. Roopika Risam (Dartmouth University) will then respond and lead a discussion among the keynote presenters.
Free registration for the Symposium will open in late January 2022. Find out more, including information about past Symposia at https://msuglobaldh.org/.
Sincerely,
Kristen Mapes, on behalf of the Symposium Planning Committee
Kristen Mapes
Assistant Director of Digital Humanities, College of Arts & Letters
Michigan State University
East Lansing MI
kmapes(a)msu.edu
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Dear colleagues,
This is a reminder that we are still looking for participants to review proposals for next year's Global Digital Humanities Symposium<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/www.msuglobaldh.org/__;!!HXCxUKc!3Ebjfpk…>! (Virtual March 13-15 / In Person March 17) For the 2023 Symposium, we will continue to accept proposals in Spanish and English, and we are excited to accept proposals in Chinese for the first time this year. We hope the added linguistic diversity will help push the symposium further in its goal to draw a global mix of DH perspectives into conversation.
The symposia of past years have been successful thanks to the generous contributions of our reviewers who have helped to shape engaging and wide-ranging scholarly programs. We're hoping to expand our numbers this year, particularly with those who are readers of Spanish and Chinese (Mandarin), and would love to have your participation. If you're interested in reviewing, please fill out this brief form<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/forms.gle/LRMKMjfh5bi8L7mf9__;!!HXCxUKc!…> by Monday, November 28th, 2022.
As a reviewer, you would be assigned 4 to 6 proposals, each of which you'd be asked to evaluate in a short online form. We expect to send reviewers their assignments December 2nd, and will ask for completed reviews by January 6, 2023. As in past years, we run a double-anonymous review process, so you will review proposals without identifying information, and your identity will remain anonymous as well.
The Global DH Symposium is working with Reviews in DH<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/reviewsindh.pubpub.org/__;!!HXCxUKc!3Ebj…> to create a special issue in 2023, focusing on projects shared at the Symposium. The first round of selection for projects to be included in the special issue will be based on feedback from Symposium reviewers. Symposium reviewers will also have the opportunity to be considered to review Symposium projects for the special issue.
Thanks for your attention and if you have any questions, feel free to be in touch.
Thanks,
Kate Topham, on behalf of
Global DH Symposium Planning Committee
Michigan State University
--
Kate Topham (she/her)
Digital Humanities Archivist, DH@MSU
College of Arts & Letters |Michigan State University
479 West Circle Drive, Linton Hall 308b
East Lansing MI 48824
tophamka(a)msu.edu<mailto:tophamka@msu.edu>
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Dear colleagues,
The Global Digital Humanities Symposium Planning Committee is pleased to announce the keynote speakers for the virtual event, March 13-15, 2023. There will also be an in-person Symposium at Michigan State University on March 17, 2023.
Keynotes for the Virtual Symposium
Thenmozhi Soundararajan (Equity Labs) and Elaine Gan (Wesleyan University) will each give keynote presentations. Roopika Risam (Dartmouth University) will then respond and lead a discussion among the keynote presenters.
The Call for Proposals is available in English, Spanish, and Mandarin Chinese (links below), and proposals and presentations are welcome in any of these three languages. During the Virtual Symposium, we will support live interpretation of presentations, as well as live captions for presentations in English. Further details about multilingualism at the Symposium are available in the CFP.
Two weeks until the deadline to apply: Thursday, December 1, 2022, midnight in your timezone
Full CFP - English - https://msuglobaldh.org/call-for-proposals-english/
Full CFP - Español - https://msuglobaldh.org/call-for-proposals-espagnol/
Full CFP - 中文 - https://msuglobaldh.org/call-for-proposals-chinese/
This year we especially anticipate and welcome presentations on the following topics:
* Digital rights, advocacy, and activism
* Digital storytelling
* Anti-colonial digital humanities
* Digital humanities, the environment, and sustainability
We are always interested to hear about the following topics:
* Digital Humanities approaches to the global pandemics and issues of healthcare
* Indigeneity – anywhere in the world – and the digital
* Surveillance, censorship, and/or data privacy in a global context
* Productive failure; failure as a part of DH praxis
* Cultural heritage in a range of contexts, particularly non-Western
* Open data, open access, and data preservation as resistance
* Global digital pedagogies and emerging technologies
* Equity and inclusion in digital access
* Borders, migration, and/or diasporas and their connections to the digital
* Multilingualism and the digital
* Global research dialogues and collaborations
Presentation formats vary for the Virtual and the In-Person Symposium. See the full CFP for details.
Free registration for the Symposium will open in late January 2022. Find out more, including information about past Symposia at https://msuglobaldh.org/.
Sincerely,
Kristen Mapes, on behalf of the Symposium Planning Committee
Kristen Mapes
Assistant Director of Digital Humanities, College of Arts & Letters
Michigan State University
East Lansing MI
kmapes(a)msu.edu
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Dear colleagues,
The Global Digital Humanities Symposium<http://msuglobaldh.org/> is in need of Mandarin Chinese-English interpreters for the 8th annual Symposium, the virtual portion of which is scheduled for March 13-15, 2023. This virtual event will take place synchronously using Zoom over three days, with approximately four hours each day of activity and three hours each day of programming. Interpreters will work in teams of two, in shifts lasting not longer than 90 minutes each.
Interpreters would be responsible for providing live, synchronous Mandarin Chinese interpretation of conference presentations in English, and English interpretation of presentations in Mandarin Chinese. During Q&A sessions, interpreters will provide translation of the presenter's answers to questions, but are not responsible for translating questions asked by participants. Interpreters will be given a draft of each presentation a week in advance of the conference in order to assist with preparation.
Compensation and Time Expectations
$80 USD per hour
Each interpreter is likely to be assigned six hours of live interpretation during the span of the Symposium, with an estimated five hours of preparatory work in advance of the event. Details and confirmation of the schedule will come when the program is announced in early February 2023.
Preferred Qualifications
* Native fluency in Mandarin Chinese
* Experience with Digital Humanities and the Humanities generally
* Experience providing live interpretation, especially for an academic conference or in another academic context (strongly preferred)
Required Qualifications
* Fluency in English
* Fluency in Mandarin Chinese
Technical Requirements
* Must have access to a computer
* Must have access to reliable and strong internet connection
* Must have a quiet place for providing the interpretation
* Ideally have quality headset and microphone
Please get in touch with me, Kate Topham (tophamka(a)msu.edu<mailto:tophamka@msu.edu>), by December 7th, 2023 to express your interest in serving as an interpreter for the event. I am also happy to answer any questions about interpretation for the Symposium.
Sincerely,
Kate Topham, on behalf of the Global DH Symposium Planning Committee
--
Kate Topham (she/her)
Digital Humanities Archivist, DH@MSU
College of Arts & Letters |Michigan State University
479 West Circle Drive, Linton Hall 308b
East Lansing MI 48824
tophamka(a)msu.edu<mailto:tophamka@msu.edu>
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Dear GO:DH community,
As you may have seen from our message earlier this month, the Call for Proposals for next year's Global Digital Humanities Symposium<https://www.msuglobaldh.org/> is released! (Virtual March 13-15 / In Person March 17) For the 2023 Symposium, we will continue to accept proposals in Spanish and English, and we are excited to accept proposals in Chinese for the first time this year. We hope the added linguistic diversity will help push the symposium further in its goal to draw a global mix of DH perspectives into conversation.
The symposia of past years have been successful thanks to the generous contributions of our reviewers who have helped to shape engaging and wide-ranging scholarly programs. We're hoping to expand our numbers this year, particularly with those who are readers of Spanish and Chinese (Mandarin), and would love to have your participation. If you're interested in reviewing, please fill out this brief form<https://forms.gle/LRMKMjfh5bi8L7mf9> by Monday, November 28th, 2022.
As a reviewer, you would be assigned 4 to 6 proposals, each of which you'd be asked to evaluate in a short online form. We expect to send reviewers their assignments December 2nd, and will ask for completed reviews by January 6, 2023. As in past years, we run a double-anonymous review process, so you will review proposals without identifying information, and your identity will remain anonymous as well.
The Global DH Symposium is working with Reviews in DH<https://reviewsindh.pubpub.org/> to create a special issue in 2023, focusing on projects shared at the Symposium. The first round of selection for projects to be included in the special issue will be based on feedback from Symposium reviewers. Symposium reviewers will also have the opportunity to be considered to review Symposium projects for the special issue.
Thanks for your attention and if you have any questions, feel free to be in touch.
Thanks,
Kate Topham, on behalf of
Global DH Symposium Planning Committee
Michigan State University
--
Kate Topham (she/her)
Digital Humanities Archivist, DH@MSU
College of Arts & Letters |Michigan State University
479 West Circle Drive, Linton Hall 308b
East Lansing MI 48824
tophamka(a)msu.edu<mailto:tophamka@msu.edu>
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Dear All,
I hope everybody is doing well and stay healthy. I hereby want to inform you that the deadline for submissions to the ADHO DH2023 conference has been extended to November 4, 2022.
You can find the details in our web site(here: https://dh2023.adho.org/?p=505)
All the best...
On Behalf of ADHO Comm. Team
Erdal Ayan
ADHO Communication Fellow
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Dear colleagues,
The Global Digital Humanities Symposium Planning Committee is pleased to open the Call for Proposals for the 8th annual Symposium, scheduled as a virtual event, March 12-15, 2023 and an in-person event at Michigan State University, March 17, 2023.
The Call for Proposals is now available in English, Spanish, and Chinese (links below), and proposals and presentations are welcome in any of these three languages. During the Virtual Symposium, we will support live interpretation of presentations, as well as live captions for presentations in English. Further details about multilingualism at the Symposium are available in the CFP.
Deadline to apply: Thursday, December 1, 2022, midnight in your timezone
Full CFP - English - https://msuglobaldh.org/call-for-proposals-english
Full CFP - Español - https://msuglobaldh.org/call-for-proposals-espagnol
Full CFP - 中文 - https://msuglobaldh.org/call-for-proposals-chinese
This year we especially anticipate and welcome presentations on the following topics:
* Digital rights, advocacy, and activism
* Digital storytelling
* Anti-colonial digital humanities
* Digital humanities, the environment, and sustainability
We are always interested to hear about the following topics:
* Digital Humanities approaches to the global pandemics and issues of healthcare
* Indigeneity – anywhere in the world – and the digital
* Surveillance, censorship, and/or data privacy in a global context
* Productive failure; failure as a part of DH praxis
* Cultural heritage in a range of contexts, particularly non-Western
* Open data, open access, and data preservation as resistance
* Global digital pedagogies and emerging technologies
* Equity and inclusion in digital access
* Borders, migration, and/or diasporas and their connections to the digital
* Multilingualism and the digital
* Global research dialogues and collaborations
Presentation formats vary for the Virtual and the In-Person Symposium. See the full CFP for details.
Free registration for the Symposium will open in late January 2022. Find out more, including information about past Symposia at https://msuglobaldh.org<https://msuglobaldh.org/>.
Sincerely,
Kristen Mapes, on behalf of the Symposium Planning Committee
Kristen Mapes
Assistant Director of Digital Humanities, College of Arts & Letters
Michigan State University
East Lansing MI
kmapes(a)msu.edu
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Due to several requests, we have extended the submission deadline to 4
September 2022
Final call for papers
Third workshop on Resources for African Indigenous Language (RAIL)
https://bit.ly/rail2022
The South African Centre for Digital Language Resources (SADiLaR) is
organising the 3rd RAIL workshop in the field of Resources for African
Indigenous Languages. This workshop aims to bring together researchers
who are interested in showcasing their research and thereby boosting
the field of African indigenous languages. This provides an overview of
the current state-of-the-art and emphasizes availability of African
indigenous language resources, including both data and tools.
Additionally, it will allow for information sharing among researchers
interested in African indigenous languages and also start discussions
on improving the quality and availability of the resources. Many
African indigenous languages currently have no or very limited
resources available and, additionally, they are often structurally
quite different from more well-resourced languages, requiring the
development and use of specialized techniques. By bringing together
researchers from different fields (e.g., (computational) linguistics,
sociolinguistics, language technology) to discuss the development of
language resources for African indigenous languages, we hope to boost
research in this field.
The RAIL workshop is an interdisciplinary platform for researchers
working on resources (data collections, tools, etc.) specifically
targeted towards African indigenous languages. It aims to create the
conditions for the emergence of a scientific community of practice that
focuses on data, as well as tools, specifically designed for or applied
to indigenous languages found in Africa.
Suggested topics include the following:
* Digital representations of linguistic structures
* Descriptions of corpora or other data sets of African indigenous
languages
* Building resources for (under resourced) African indigenous languages
* Developing and using African indigenous languages in the digital age
* Effectiveness of digital technologies for the development of African
indigenous languages
* Revealing unknown or unpublished existing resources for African
indigenous languages
* Developing desired resources for African indigenous languages
* Improving quality, availability and accessibility of African
indigenous language resources
The 3rd RAIL workshop 2022 will be co-located with the 10th Southern
African Microlinguistics Workshop
(https://sites.google.com/nwulettere.co.za/samwop-10/home). This will
be an in-person event located in Potchefstroom, South Africa.
Registration will be free.
RAIL 2022 submission requirements:
* RAIL asks for full papers from 4 pages to 8 pages (plus more pages
for references if needed), which must strictly follow the Journal of
the Digital Humanities Association of Southern Africa style guide
(https://upjournals.up.ac.za/index.php/dhasa/libraryFiles/downloadPublic/30
).
* Accepted submissions will be published in JDHASA, the Journal of the
Digital Humanities Association of Southern Africa
(https://upjournals.up.ac.za/index.php/dhasa/).
* Papers will be double blind peer-reviewed and must be submitted
through EasyChair (https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=rail2022).
Important dates
Submission deadline: 4 September 2022
Date of notification: 30 September 2022
Camera ready copy deadline: 23 October 2022
RAIL: 30 November 2022, North-West University - Potchefstroom
SAMWOP: 1 – 3 December 2022, North-West University - Potchefstroom
Organising Committee
Jessica Mabaso
Rooweither Mabuya
Muzi Matfunjwa
Mmasibidi Setaka
Menno van Zaanen
South African Centre for Digital Language Resources (SADiLaR), South
Africa
--
Prof Menno van Zaanen menno.vanzaanen(a)nwu.ac.za
Professor in Digital Humanities
South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
https://www.sadilar.org
________________________________
NWU CORONA VIRUS:
http://www.nwu.ac.za/coronavirus/
NWU PRIVACY STATEMENT:
http://www.nwu.ac.za/it/gov-man/disclaimer.html
DISCLAIMER: This e-mail message and attachments thereto are intended solely for the recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorised review, use, disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you have received the e-mail by mistake, please contact the sender or reply e-mail and delete the e-mail and its attachments (where appropriate) from your system.
________________________________
Caution: This email was sent from someone outside of the University of Lethbridge. Do not click on links or open attachments unless you know they are safe. Suspicious emails should be forwarded to phishing(a)uleth.ca.
Final call for papers
Third workshop on Resources for African Indigenous Language (RAIL)
https://bit.ly/rail2022
The South African Centre for Digital Language Resources (SADiLaR) is
organising the 3rd RAIL workshop in the field of Resources for African
Indigenous Languages. This workshop aims to bring together researchers
who are interested in showcasing their research and thereby boosting
the field of African indigenous languages. This provides an overview of
the current state-of-the-art and emphasizes availability of African
indigenous language resources, including both data and tools.
Additionally, it will allow for information sharing among researchers
interested in African indigenous languages and also start discussions
on improving the quality and availability of the resources. Many
African indigenous languages currently have no or very limited
resources available and, additionally, they are often structurally
quite different from more well-resourced languages, requiring the
development and use of specialized techniques. By bringing together
researchers from different fields (e.g., (computational) linguistics,
sociolinguistics, language technology) to discuss the development of
language resources for African indigenous languages, we hope to boost
research in this field.
The RAIL workshop is an interdisciplinary platform for researchers
working on resources (data collections, tools, etc.) specifically
targeted towards African indigenous languages. It aims to create the
conditions for the emergence of a scientific community of practice that
focuses on data, as well as tools, specifically designed for or applied
to indigenous languages found in Africa.
Suggested topics include the following:
* Digital representations of linguistic structures
* Descriptions of corpora or other data sets of African indigenous
languages
* Building resources for (under resourced) African indigenous languages
* Developing and using African indigenous languages in the digital age
* Effectiveness of digital technologies for the development of African
indigenous languages
* Revealing unknown or unpublished existing resources for African
indigenous languages
* Developing desired resources for African indigenous languages
* Improving quality, availability and accessibility of African
indigenous language resources
The 3rd RAIL workshop 2022 will be co-located with the 10th Southern
African Microlinguistics Workshop (
https://sites.google.com/nwulettere.co.za/samwop-10/home). This will be
an in-person event located in Potchefstroom, South Africa. Registration
will be free.
RAIL 2022 submission requirements:
* RAIL asks for full papers from 4 pages to 8 pages (plus more pages
for references if needed), which must strictly follow the Journal of
the Digital Humanities Association of Southern Africa style guide (
https://upjournals.up.ac.za/index.php/dhasa/libraryFiles/downloadPublic/30
).
* Accepted submissions will be published in JDHASA, the Journal of the
Digital Humanities Association of Southern Africa (
https://upjournals.up.ac.za/index.php/dhasa/).
* Papers will be double blind peer-reviewed and must be submitted
through EasyChair (https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=rail2022).
Important dates
Submission deadline: 28 August 2022
Date of notification: 30 September 2022
Camera ready copy deadline: 23 October 2022
RAIL: 30 November 2022, North-West University - Potchefstroom
SAMWOP: 1 – 3 December 2022, North-West University - Potchefstroom
Organising Committee
Jessica Mabaso
Rooweither Mabuya
Muzi Matfunjwa
Mmasibidi Setaka
Menno van Zaanen
South African Centre for Digital Language Resources (SADiLaR), South
Africa
--
Prof Menno van Zaanen menno.vanzaanen(a)nwu.ac.za
Professor in Digital Humanities
South African Centre for Digital Language Resources
https://www.sadilar.org
________________________________
NWU CORONA VIRUS:
http://www.nwu.ac.za/coronavirus/
NWU PRIVACY STATEMENT:
http://www.nwu.ac.za/it/gov-man/disclaimer.html
DISCLAIMER: This e-mail message and attachments thereto are intended solely for the recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorised review, use, disclosure, or distribution is prohibited. If you have received the e-mail by mistake, please contact the sender or reply e-mail and delete the e-mail and its attachments (where appropriate) from your system.
________________________________