This is a reminder that voting is open for elections to the GO::DH Executive Committee.
All members of the mailing list as of Sunday, February 22, 2015, when voting opened, are eligible to vote in the election. To vote, please use this Google Form and select up to four candidates. Voting will be open until March 1st, 2015. Election results will be announced shortly afterwards.
We
are pleased to have such an exciting slate of candidates from around
the world and with a range of experiences for this year's election. The
bios and candidate statements for each of the nominees are below, in
alphabetical order:
Barbara Bordalejo
Bio: Barbara
Bordalejo is professor of Digital Humanities at KU Leuven, where she
teaches digital textuality and electronic literature. She is part of the
executive of the European Association for Digital Humanities and has
been part of the executive of GO::DH since its foundation, to which she
was elected last year.
Statement: GO::DH has become an important
forum for the initiation and promotion of collaboration with others.
With the institutional support of KU Leuven and as the head of the
Digital Humanities Task Force in the Faculty of Arts, I am in a good
position to continue to contribute to this community. For the next term,
I would like to renew efforts to open new lines of communication with
places that continue to be underepresented (Africa, South and Central
America) and to create more spaces to initiate productive dialogues
leading to a richer, polifonic future. In order to achieve this, I will
build on KU Leuven’s history of cultural exchange and enrichment and
expand this to different areas of DH.
Gimena del Rio
Bio:
Gimena del Rio is a researcher at the Seminario de Edicion y Crítica
Textual (SECRIT-IIBIRCIT) of the National Scientific and Technical
Research Council in Argentina and a fundamental promoter of the
Argentinian Association of Digital Humanities. S
Statement (from
nominator): Part from her academic activities in Digital Humanities, she
has been instrumental at grounding the field in Argentina by promoting
transdisciplinary community practices. Her involvement with other DH
communities around the world would be a definite asset for the Executive
Committee as GO::DH increasingly builds a sense of a global DH
community. She could offer a interesting point of view on the Latin
American development of DH and an enthusiastic member of the DH
Community in Spanish.
Alex Gil
Bio: Alex Gil
specializes in twentieth-century Caribbean literature, with an emphasis
on critical bibliography, digital humanities and textual scholarship. He
has published in journals across the Atlantic and the Americas, while
sustaining an open and robust online research presence. In 2010-2012 he
was a fellow at the Scholars' Lab and NINES at the University of
Virginia. He now serves as co-chair of the Global Outlook::Digital
Humanities initiative and is actively engaged in digital humanities
projects at Columbia University and around the world.
Statement:
As vice-chair and then as co-chair of GO::DH in the 2014-2015 period, I
oversaw the creation of the AroundDH project with other GO::DH members,
which highlighted one project each day around the world. This project
helped make visible the wonderful work that folks are doing around the
world in digital humanities by any name. During the DH2014 in Lausanne,
with the leadership of Elika Ortega, we launched the Whispering Program,
which re-started the conversation around translation for ADHO and led
to a vibrant conversation with many communities around the world on the
role of language in DH. Supporting the initiative of James O´Sullivan,
we redid our site to make it more simple and began the process of
aligning it with principles of minimal computing. During this period I
also coordinated the creation of the affiliate program that brought us
together to the RedHD, the AHDig and the SADH group. At the moment, I am
working with the minimal computing working group to kickstart a Jekyll
site that can serve as a position site and resource for minimal
computing. If elected I would continue to support all of our groups, and
help in the formation of new ones, as I have in the two years I have
been involved at GO::DH. As a member of the executive for a third term,
my major policy contribution would be an amendment to the by-laws that
would guarantee representation by a member of each affiliate
organisation in the executive, pushing GO::DH towards the truly diverse
global organisation for which we have laid the seeds together already.
Martin Grandjean
Bio:
Martin Grandjean is a contemporary history researcher at the University
of Lausanne (Switzerland). He is interested in cultural relations and
scientific exchanges during the interwar period. Combining network
analysis and data visualization, his research are impregnated by the
digital humanities (see his blog). Martin Grandjean is a founding member
and the current spokesman of Humanistica, the french-speaking
association for digital humanities.
Statement: The GO::DH
executive committee interests me for two reasons. I am personally
convinced that this is an area of both reflection and action in which
our community need to make urgent progress. On the other hand, as the
spokesman of the French DH association, I know how much we need this
kind of relay. We are also facing similar problems inside the
Francophonie, which extends from Canada to many African countries, with
several European countries and individuals residing in many other
countries.
Dan O'Donnell
Bio: I am one of the
founding members of the group that eventually became GO::DH and served
as its first chair. Prior to chairing GO::DH, I fulfilled a number of
administrative roles in the Digital Humanities, including chair of the
Text Encoding Initiative, co-President of the Canadian Society for
Digital Humanities/Societé canadienne des humanités numériques, and
founding director of Digital Medievalist. I am currently editor-in-chief
of the ADHO supported journal Digital Studies/Le champ numérique.
Statement:
I see the main tasks of GO::DH over the next two years as being a) to
maintain its momentum and willingness to experiment and innovate, and b)
develop a more robust scholarly infrastructure (annual or semi-annual
conference, regular cfps and special issues). In the last two years,
GO::DH has had an astounding impact on the global understanding and
practice of the Digital Humanities. I'm interested in ensuring that
influence continues.
Padmini Ray Murray
Bio: I
am currently on the faculty at the Srishti School for Art, Design and
Technology in Bangalore, India, working in conjunction with the Centre
of Public History, where I am setting up a collaborative programme in
the Digital Humanities and Public History. I have been a recipient of
two Arts and Humanities Research Council funding awards: on the
disruption and disintermediation in the publishing industry under the
aegis of the Digital Transformations programme; and as one of five Unbox
Fellows, during which my research focused on videogames in India. In
the absence of a cohesive digital humanities presence in Scotland, I
founded DHNetS earlier this year (Digital Humanities Network Scotland)
and am at the helm of the newly established South Asian Digital
Humanities Network, which has just launched its website, and has already
attracted a modest membership. I am on the Editorial Board of the
peer-reviewed journal Technoculture and have served as an elected
Trustee for the past year on the board of Wikimedia UK.
Statement:
It’s an honour to submit my candidacy for an organisation that does so
much to foster outreach and build community amongst scholars—and it is
my hope that, should I be elected, I could do much to uphold these aims
through the following: As someone who will be working in, and has
trained in the global south, I feel it is important to address how local
contexts shape and inform our understanding of the digital humanities
as a discipline. I am keen to facilitate conversations between the wider
DH community and the newly launched South Asian Digital Humanities
Network that addresses questions of access, infrastructure, economic and
government policy, the exigencies of working in languages other than
English, rate of technological growth and obsolescence, and our
different institutional histories to broaden these horizons. In
practical terms, I hope my role will enable me to ensure a greater
representation from this part of the world by fostering training
initiatives, exchanges and network-building activities.
Nuria Rodríguez Ortega
Bio:
Nuria Rodríguez Ortega is the head of the History of Art department at
the University of Málaga (UMA). She also directs the research group
i-ArtHis_Lab (iarthis.hdplus.es)
and leads ReArte.Dix (the international network of Digital Studies on
Artistic Culture. Since 2010 she coordinates the MA program in Social
Devlopment and Artistic Culture also at UMA. Her reseach focuses on
the intersection between computing languages, dgital media ant art
history. She has also worked on the junction of entrepreneurship and
culture and is the co-founder of the award-winning spin-off Culturacy
Statement:
Given the cultural and geopoligical expansion seen in Digital
Humanities practice, I believe it is extremely necessary to further
develop initiatives like GO::DH in order to explore the diversity and
plurality of these practices in a global context so as to discover that
which brings us together but also identifying what the idiosincracies of
each context are. GO::DH provides an exceptional context to work
towards that. Furthermore, I believe that my training as an art
historian, artistic culture, and cultural heritage in general will add a
perspective that is not always present in DH disussions.
Mari Sarv
Bio:
Mari Sarv works at Estonian Folklore Archives (Estonian Literary
Museum) since 1996, as a senior researcher since 2008, since 2012 she is
leading the research group of Estonian Folklore Archives. Her main
subject of study is older Estonian folksong (regilaul). She has
published two monographs on the topic (2000 and 2008), has organized
conferences on regilaul and edited proceedings from these conferences.
She has been contributing to the developing of the database of Estonian
regilaul including almost 100000 songtexts by now and she has been
widely using the computational methods in her research (metrical and
poetical analysis, cartographic representations, social network
analysis). Since the very beginning of her career she has been trying to
initiate a digital turn in the archival system of her home archives,
and later on has been contributing to several projects related to
establishing and developing the digital archival system of Estonian
Literary Museum. Together with her colleague Kaisa Kulasalu she
organized the first conferences on Estonian digital humanities in 2013
and 2014, established the web page and mailing list for Estonian DH
community.
Statement: GO:DH is a great and necessary initiative,
the existence of it already brings awareness on the problematics of
non-english DH As there is definitely a linguistic gap between the
english speaking world and the rest in the field of DH, the SIG should
contribute to the diminishing of it - explaining the problems of non-english DHers to the wider audience - helping to spread awareness of the DH tools and projects between English and non-English world - contributing to the organizing of training events for non-English developing DH communities - forming a network for people with common problems - spreading awareness of the need for dh tools and standards to be accustomizable for multilingual use.
David Joseph Wrisely
Bio:
I have been living and teaching in Beirut since 2002 where I am an
Associate Professor in a department of English. My research interests
include medieval studies, Mediterranean studies, as well as various
elements of the spatial humanities: literary GIS, historical
gazetteers, ground-up community mapping. While on sabbatical this year I
launched a set a workshops "Topics in Digital Mapping" at Fordham
University co-taught with graduate students, in order to build a
community of practice around digital mapping. This year I have also
organized two major DH activities at my home university: the Arab
World's first That Camp, and the first sustained DH training opportunity
in the region, the Digital Humanities Institute – Beirut (dhibeirut.wordpress.com).
The institute is offering 8 courses and will bring together 80+
participants (students, faculty, chairs, library, IT) from a dozen
local and international universities/research centers, as well as
members of local NGOs, government and industry.
Statement: I am
fascinated in a digital humanities that arises organically from
community--in its languages and its world views--that learns from the
global community and gives back to it with its own special touch. I am
interested in building local, regional and international partnerships
for DH training and research. I can be found on twitter as @DJWrisley.
All best, Roopika Risam and Élika Ortega (Returning Officers and Nominations Committee)
--
Roopika Risam, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Salem State University http://roopikarisam.com