Hi all,
Nominations are open for election to the Executive of GO::DH.
GO::DH elections are preceded by a nomination period of two weeks in which
members are asked to consider nominating themselves or someone else for
election to the GO::DH board (self-nominations are welcome and common; if
you nominate somebody else, please ensure that they are willing to stand
for election before you do). After nominations close, the election is held
by electronic ballot open to all subscribers to the list.
The executive has eight voting positions, half of which are up for election
each year. This means that we have four positions to fill this year. All
out going members of the executive are eligible for reelection, though not
all have indicated that they intended to stand again. It is also the norm
at GO::DH that we have competitive elections with more than one candidate.
All who wish to put their names forward will be warmly welcomed as
candidates.
All voting positions on the board are for two year terms that can be
renewed three times.
To nominate yourself or somebody else as a candidate, please email the
returning officer, Daniel O'Donnell, at elections(a)globaloutlookdh.org
by *Midnight
AoE (Anywhere on Earth) <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anywhere_on_Earth>,
Friday March 11, 2016*. In your email, please include the following
information:
1. The name of the nominee
2. Preferred email address of the nominee (if you are nominating
somebody other than yourself, please be sure to cc your nominee on the
email so that we know they are willing to stand and that we know we have a
working email address for them).
3. An optional brief candidate statement (<250 words). This can be
anything you wish: a bio; an explanation of your aims for the position;
political planks. This statement will be published to the GO::DH website.
The election will be held the week after nominations close.
Thank you very much!
-dan
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Revista De Antropologia Y Arqueologia <antipoda(a)uniandes.edu.co>
Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2016 at 08:39
Subject: Call for articles “Ethnography and Science and Technology Studies”
To:
*Antípoda *– *Revista de Antropología y Arqueología *invites the academic
community to submit articles between February 1st and March 31st of 2016,
for the *Meridianos* section of issue 26 (September-December 2016)
dedicated to the topic of *“Ethnography and Science and Technology
Studies.” *
Today, one of the most fertile influences for doing and thinking
anthropology comes from the heterogeneous field of Science and Technology
Studies. A growing number of anthropologists find inspiration there for
rethinking traditional problems of their discipline and for opening up new
thematic areas for reflection. Simultaneously, ethnography has also become
one of the preferred ways of producing situated knowledge from the
perspective of Science and Technology Studies, which in turn has reshaped
the way that ethnographic work in general is conceived, lived and
experienced.
However, it is not just a matter of broadening ethnographic topics,
scenarios and objects. In addition to opening the doors of laboratories to
ethnography and allowing it to experiment with all types of devices, the
influence of STS has strengthened the ethnographic question regarding
reality and its relations to all types of practices and knowledge.
Ultimately, anthropology has availed itself of this inspiration in STS to
explore topics that do not necessarily refer to the domain of
technoscience, in a profoundly conceptual and at the same time empirical
creative exercise. Ethnography, at the intersection between anthropology
and STS, is therefore not just a way of gathering and presenting data, but
also a way of producing theory that emerges from the field and cannot be
separated from it.
With issue 26, *Antípoda *continues its reflections on ethnography as a way
of conceiving of anthropological knowledge (see, for example, *Antípoda **16
“**Etnografías en transición”*). We hope to receive original articles that
present reflections of this type from the perspective of anthropology,
Science and Technology Studies, or the interface between the two. We are
interested in receiving proposals conceived of and developed with evident
theoretical and methodological crosscurrents, and that reflect on the
intersections and divergences between anthropology and STS in Latin
America.
*Texts will be received between February 1st and March 31st of 2016,
through the platform for reception of articles on our webpage. Texts will
be accepted in Spanish, English and Portuguese. In addition to this call
for articles, Antípoda is permanently open to receiving articles on a free
choice of topics in anthropology and archaeology, and we therefore request
that you indicate the fact when your work is being submitted in response to
this specific call for articles on “Ethnography and Science and Technology
Studies.” All relevant information on the editorial process and the rules
for authors is available on our webpage: *
http://antipoda.uniandes.edu.co/page.php?c=Pol%C3%ADticas+%C3%A9ticas
Santiago Martínez Medina
Editor
*Equipo editorial Antípoda*
*Santiago Martínez Medina*
Editor, Revista *ANTÍPODA* <http://antipoda.uniandes.edu.co/index.php>
Email: s.martinez <editoraantipoda(a)uniandes.edu.co>65(a)uniandes.edu.co
Departamento de Antropología <http://antropologia.uniandes.edu.co/>
Facultad de Ciencias Sociales
Universidad de los Andes
Edificio Gb
Cr 1 18A 12
Bogotá, Colombia
Tel: +571 3394999, Ext. 3483
This is a really interesting organisation for this group: they are part of
the supporters of the Endangered Archives project.
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Stephanie Hagstrom <admin(a)force11.org>
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 2016 at 09:49
Subject: [FoRCnet.org] JOB OPPORTUNITY - ARCADIA FUND, LONDON
To: FoRC <forcnet(a)googlegroups.com>
Job opportunity. Arcadia Fund (www.arcadiafund.org.uk). is currently
recruiting for an Assistant Grants Manager with experience in open access
and digital humanities.
www.force11.org/article/job-opportunity-arcadia-fund-london
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"FoRC" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
email to forcnet+unsubscribe(a)googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
**apologies for cross posting**---To all digital humanists or people working on digital humanities projects,
Please, save the date and join us for the annual Day of Digital Humanities that will take place on April 8th, 2016.
A Day in the Life of the Digital Humanities (Day of DH) is a project looking at a day in the work life of people involved in digital humanities computing. Every year it draws people from across the world together to document, with text and image, the events and activities of their day. The goal of the project is to weave together the journals of participants into a resource that seeks to answer, “Just what do digital humanists really do?"
This year, the event will be hosted on behalf of centerNet at the Laboratorio de Innovación en Humanidades Digitales (LINHD) in Madrid. For this reason, want to innovate and make the day more collaborative. We will boost multilingual participation and groupal cooperative activities.
We are working on the website now, www.dayofdh2016.uned.es which will be opened for registration soon. If you have any suggestions or ideas in the meantime, please, let us know!
Yours,
The LINHD team
Twitter: @dayofdh and #dayofDH
Elena González-Blanco García
Dpto. de Literatura Española y Teoría de la Literatura, Despacho 722Facultad de Filología, UNED
Paseo Senda del Rey 7
28040 MADRID
tel. 91 3986873
Registration is now open!
*Global Digital Humanities Symposium*
*April 8-9, 2016*
Michigan State University
East Lansing, Michigan
http://msuglobaldh.org/
Free and open to the public. Register at
http://msuglobaldh.org/registration/
Featured speakers include:
- Dorothy Kim
- Alex Gil
- Radhika Gajjala
- Hoyt Long
Digital humanities has developed in a range of disciplines and locations
across the globe. Initially emergent from initiatives in textual encoding,
database building, or critiques of design and media cultures, the field is
increasingly drawn together. Present scholarship works at the intersections
of what had been disparate approaches. Much digital humanities scholarship
is driven by an ethical commitment to preserve and broaden access to
cultural materials. The most engaged global DH scholarship values digital
tools that enhance the capacity of scholarly critique to reflect a broad
range of histories, as well as present geographical and cultural positions.
Projects that seek to bring grant resources from the West are often met
with well-developed and challenging critiques emergent around the globe
from communities deeply engaged in their own cultural preservation, as well
as in building relationships with other similarly engaged scholars. This
symposium, which will include an extended workshop and a mixture of
presentation types, engages squarely with issues of power, access, and
equity as they affect scholarship in the digital humanities.
Invited speakers and local presenters at this two-day symposium will
address how the interdisciplinary practices of digital humanities can and
should speak to the global cultural record and the contemporary situation
of our planet. Of particular interest is work relevant to or stemming from
challenges in the Global South. The symposium seeks to strengthen networks
of exchange among DH scholars nationally and internationally.
Themes and topics of this symposium will include:
- the practice of digital humanities across linguistic, economic, and
technological divides
- digital humanities in the light of current geopolitics
- the environmental impacts of digital humanities research
- the inflection of local accents in the practices and ethics of digital
humanities
Find out more about the symposium at http://msuglobaldh.org/about/
Kristen Mapes
Digital Humanities Specialist, College of Arts & Letters
Michigan State University
479 West Circle Drive, Linton Hall 308A
East Lansing MI 48824
517.884.1712
kmapes(a)msu.edu
May be of interest to some on this list. ASIST focuses on slightly
broader issues of information science and management, I think there is
definitely some overlap, if we consider DH as a domain for information
management/studies/mining/interfaces, etc.
-unmil.
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [Asis-l] Call for nominations for the Infoshare membership award
Date: Tue, 2 Feb 2016 23:22:58 +0530
From: Anindita Paul <aninditapaul(a)gmail.com>
To: asis-l(a)asis.org
*** Please excuse cross posting ***
Dear Colleagues,
The ASIS&T International Information Issues Special Interest Group
(SIG-III) is pleased to announce that for 2016 we will be able to
sponsor another group of deserving information professionals from
developing countries for complimentary ASIS&T memberships (the financial
burden of which would otherwise be prohibitive). We are soliciting
nominations of candidates for the InfoShare Membership Award. The award
will be given to LIS professionals.
Please include a one-page curriculum vitae and a one-page description of
why this person is deserving of membership, including their willingness
to promote ASIS&T within their networks and build relationships between
ASIS&T and the national/regional organizations. Awardees will be decided
by a vote of the SIG-III officers. All curricula vitae will be kept
private, accessible only to SIG-III officers.
Each membership award will be for one year, with the possibility of
renewal for a second year if the new member proves to be a strong
advocate for ASIS&T in their home country during the course of the year.
Awardees will be asked to submit a report on their activities by next
year's Annual Meeting, which may include, but are not limited to:
a. sharing ASIS&T publications that they receive (the Bulletin of
ASIS&T and JASIS&T) with other colleagues
b. promoting the SIG-III paper contest among their colleagues
c. serving as a contact/coordinator for ASIS&T members traveling to
their area who may be able to speak about ASIS&T and information science
d. having the ability to strengthen the relationships between ASIS&T
and the national/regional organizations, and
e. sponsoring lectures on information science topics in their area
on behalf of ASIS&T
Nominators can mentor the award recipients for the above activities.
We look forward to welcoming new members to ASIS&T from across the
globe, especially from countries that have never been ASIS&T members or
have limited ASIS&T membership. Women, minority, and candidates from
underrepresented groups are encouraged to apply.
Please feel free to circulate the Call in your professional networks
(e.g., your alma mater listservs, professional contacts at IFLA, OCLC,
international organizations, practitioner groups, academic institutions,
etc.). Please send your nominations of deserving candidates to Anindita
Paul (aninditapaul(a)gmail.com <mailto:aninditapaul@gmail.com>) or
Krystyna Matusiak (krystyna.matusiak(a)du.edu
<mailto:krystyna.matusiak@du.edu>) .
The deadline for submitting nominations is - March 1, 2016
<x-apple-data-detectors://2>.
Thank you!
Anindita Paul
Krystyna Matusiak
------------------------------------------
Anindita Paul, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
IT & Systems
Indian Institute of Management Kozhikode
Kozhikode, India - 673570
Tel: +91 495 2809122 <tel:+91%20495%202809122>
website : http://iimk.ac.in/faculty/facultyprofile.php?pid=apaul
Sent from my iPad
*** Apologies for cross-posting ***
Dear all,
I hope the following call will be of interest to some of you.
The EADH brings together, and represents, the Digital Humanities in Europe.
It includes the entire spectrum of disciplines that research, develop, and
apply digital methods and technologies to the study of art, history,
language, literature, music, archeology, etc. But what is the current
situation of the field in Europe? And is it possible to document and
promote access, use and collaboration between groups and universities?
With the goal of gathering representative works, we have created a slider
on our website that will showcase initiatives for a period of time:
http://eadh.org/
For this reason we are looking for projects undertaken during the last
three years that contribute meaningfully to Digital Humanities in Europe.
If you want to add your Digital Humanities project to our website, please
fill in our web submission form with a project description and your contact
details: http://eadh.org/projects/submit-your-project
At the moment submissions are accepted in English. All submissions will be
reviewed by the EADH executive committee.
Please do not hesitate to contact me for further details at
rojas.castro.antonio(a)gmail.com
All the best,
--
Antonio Rojas Castro
Communication Coordinator
Dear all,
The editors at DHCommons are pleased to announce a *Call for Projects for
the Issue 2 of the ***DHCommons* Journal:*
"The editorial team of centerNet’s DHCommons journal is delighted to
request submissions for its second and subsequent issues. We seek mid-stage
digital projects who wish peer review and feedback that will contribute to
the project’s development.
"We especially hope to center our second issue on digital diversity. We
conceive of “diversity” to include diversity in project language, staff,
academic subject, or goals, among other possibilities. DHCommons invites
project statements in a wide variety of languages. We have an international
Advisory Board and will work with authors towards finding reviewers in the
language of submission whenever possible."
http://dhcommons.org/blog/2016/01/15/dhcommons-survey-and-cfp
*In addition to the general call, the editors seek submissions to the "How
Did They Make That?" Section: *
DHCommons Journal seeks procedural descriptions of how to launch and/or
maintain an exemplary aspect of a stable digital project for potential
publication in its second issue. We encourage you to emphasize in your
submission a component of the project that came out particularly well
and/or represented a significant challenge (e.g. data visualization,
accessibility compliance, data cleaning and preparation). Readers should be
able to come away with a sense of how they could begin to tackle a similar
challenge. In spirit, these submissions should be inspired by Miriam
Posner’s “How did they make that?” (
http://miriamposner.com/blog/how-did-they-make-that/).
http://dhcommons.org/blog/2016/01/19/%E2%80%9Chow-did-they-make-%E2%80%9D-s…
<http://dhcommons.org/blog/2016/01/19/%E2%80%9Chow-did-they-make-%E2%80%9D-s…>
Submission deadline for all sections is 1 April 2016.
Also, following the launch of its first issue (http://dhcommons
.org/journal/issue-1), ****DHCommons*** is seeking feedback* from the
digital humanities community. Please see this survey
http://goo.gl/forms/9XMqxTIaEI for input.
All best wishes,
Hannah
--
Multimedia Analyst, Wired! Lab, Duke University
Chair, Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations Communications Committee
@dukewired | @ADHOrg
Dear all, good news from the NEH. They're new Digging into Data Challenge
has expanded to now include Argentina, Brazil and Mexico.
Queridos todos, uma boa notícia do NEH. Eles são novo Desafio Cavando de
Dados agora incluem Argentina, Brasil e México. Deixe-me saber se você vai
gostar de saber mais, ou se você precisar de ajuda para a aplicação.
Queridos, buenas noticias. La NEH ofrece un nuevo premio para proyectos en
minado de datos para las humanidades. Déjenme saber si necesitan ayuda con
la aplicación.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Bobley, Brett <bbobley(a)neh.gov>
Date: Wed, Jan 20, 2016 at 3:41 PM
Subject: T-AP Digging into Data Challenge and Global Outlook DH
To: Alex Gil <colibri.alex(a)gmail.com>
Dear Alex,
I write to engage you and your Global Outlook DH colleagues on the new T-AP
Digging into Data Challenge
<http://diggingintodata.org/awards/2016/news/announcing-t-ap-digging-data-ch…>
.
I’m pleased to say that we have 16 funders from 11 nations all
participating in DiD. This includes countries from South America, North
America, and Europe. Many of these countries are ones I’ve never worked
with before and I’m keen to learn what kinds of terrific research their
scholars are doing! I’m also pleased that the countries represent a wide
variety of languages and cultures. Currently, some of these countries
already fund a fair amount of digital humanities and digital social science
research, while for others, this is still a very new kind of work.
So I think that global outreach will be really important. I very much want
to get researchers to form teams from across the spectrum of countries. I’d
love to see some unique partnerships we haven’t seen before, involving
people and languages we don’t always see in DH or DSS projects.
So anything you can do to help get the word out or facilitate teambuilding
would be much appreciated!
*Here’s a quick list of the countries/funders:*
Argentina: MINCyT
Brazil: FAPESP
Canada: SSHRC, NSERC, FRQ.
Finland: AKA
France: ANR
Germany: DFG
Mexico: CONACYT
Netherlands: NWO
Portugal: FCT (to be confirmed)
UK: AHRC, ESRC
US: NEH, NSF, IMLS
*Here’s a quick list of the national languages:*
Spanish
Portuguese
English
French
Finnish
German
Dutch
*Notes on Applying*
People apply in “teams.” A "team" is a group of principal investigators
from at least three of the participating countries. Because this is a
"trans-Atlantic" grant program, each team must have PIs on both sides of
the Atlantic.
*Notes on Research Topics*
Open to any research questions in the humanities and/or social sciences.
However, the idea is that you have to be using computational
methods/approaches at the large scale for your research. (And large scale
doesn’t mean big data in the scientific sense; rather it means large for
the discipline that you are working in.)
For further details, please see the website
<http://diggingintodata.org/awards/2016/news/announcing-t-ap-digging-data-ch…>
!
Thanks,
Brett
Save the Date!
*Global Digital Humanities Symposium*
*April 8-9, 2016*
Michigan State University
East Lansing, Michigan
http://msuglobaldh.org/
Free and open to the public. Registration will open in February and is
required.
Featured speakers include:
- Dorothy Kim
- Alex Gil
- Radhika Gajjala
- Hoyt Long
Digital humanities has developed in a range of disciplines and locations
across the globe. Initially emergent from initiatives in textual encoding,
database building, or critiques of design and media cultures, the field is
increasingly drawn together. Present scholarship works at the intersections
of what had been disparate approaches. Much digital humanities scholarship
is driven by an ethical commitment to preserve and broaden access to
cultural materials. The most engaged global DH scholarship values digital
tools that enhance the capacity of scholarly critique to reflect a broad
range of histories, as well as present geographical and cultural positions.
Projects that seek to bring grant resources from the West are often met
with well-developed and challenging critiques emergent around the globe
from communities deeply engaged in their own cultural preservation, as well
as in building relationships with other similarly engaged scholars. This
symposium, which will include an extended workshop and a mixture of
presentation types, engages squarely with issues of power, access, and
equity as they affect scholarship in the digital humanities.
Invited speakers and local presenters at this two-day symposium will
address how the interdisciplinary practices of digital humanities can and
should speak to the global cultural record and the contemporary situation
of our planet. Of particular interest is work relevant to or stemming from
challenges in the Global South. The symposium seeks to strengthen networks
of exchange among DH scholars nationally and internationally.
Themes and topics of this symposium will include:
- the practice of digital humanities across linguistic, economic, and
technological divides
- digital humanities in the light of current geopolitics
- the environmental impacts of digital humanities research
- the inflection of local accents in the practices and ethics of digital
humanities
Find out more about the symposium at http://msuglobaldh.org/about/
Kristen Mapes
Digital Humanities Specialist, College of Arts & Letters
Michigan State University
479 West Circle Drive, Linton Hall 308A
East Lansing MI 48824
517.884.1712
kmapes(a)msu.edu