Hello, everyone. I
thought this CFP might interest many of you on the Digital
Humanities Summer Institute list. Please don't hesitate to
contact me with any questions. The deadline for abstracts is 3
April 2015.
Best,
Jentery
****************************************
Call for Papers:
Making Humanities Matter
Jentery Sayers, Editor
Deadline for Abstracts: April 3, 2015
Part of the
Debates in the Digital Humanities Series
A book series from the University of Minnesota Press
Matthew K. Gold, Series Editor
Lauren Klein, Associate Editor
What does it mean to describe humanities scholarship as built,
assembled, or constructed? To call a humanities argument a
persuasive or provocative object? To understand humanities
disciplines as creative disciplines? To, in short, make things
in the humanities?
Engaging these questions and more, this volume in the Debates in
the Digital Humanities Series examines the arts and humanities
in an age of programmable worlds and digital/analog convergence.
As both a working title and a framework, we understand "making
humanities matter" to invite submissions that, through an
attention to both theory and practice:
* Articulate what exactly it means to make things in the
humanities;
* Describe how humanities research in computing is aligned with
the arts and creative practice (e.g., sculpture, performance,
visual arts, experimental media, and interaction design), and to
what effects on the humanities;
* Argue for what "humanities matter" should be or do, and why;
* Attend to how humanities scholarship and its materiality are
changing alongside or through the Internet of Things, wearables,
bots, physical computing, desktop fabrication, rapid
prototyping, and speculative design;
*Unpack how humanities research is expressed through materials
off the page or screen, in the form of tangible objects, tactile
media, or human-computer relations; or
* Attest to the intersections between making things and the
perceived relevance of humanities scholarship, including the
role of making in public scholarship, community-based research,
activism, and memory institutions.
Related questions include but are not limited to:
* How is making a form of experimental research or applied media
theory?
* How can tactile media be scholarship? How can argumentation be
expressed through built forms?
* How is history being made through the (re)construction of
artifacts, exhibits, experiments, and interactives?
* How is making associated with reuse, repurposing, old media,
and critiques of obsolescence or waste in the humanities?
* How are laboratories, studios, and makerspaces playing a role
in humanities research? In these spaces, how are people
translating technologies and technical practices into humanities
research?
* What does making mean for writing, rhetoric, public
communication, peer review, publishing, and the trajectories of
(scholarly) argumentation?
* How are teachers integrating making into humanities pedagogy,
and how is "making" understood in the scholarship of teaching
and learning?
* How is making functioning as a brand or fad, and to what
effects on practice and practitioners? More generally, what are
some critiques of making as a practice, movement, or concept in
and beyond the academy?
* How are maker, do-it-yourself, or do-it-ourselves movements
organized, by whom, for whom, in what relation to industry, and
under what assumptions? What are the politics of making?
Practitioners from across the disciplines (regardless of rank,
position, or whether they are affiliated with an academic
institution) are invited to submit 300-word abstracts by 3 April
2015 to Jentery Sayers at
jentery@uvic.ca.
Collaboratively authored submissions are especially welcome. The
Debates in the Digital Humanities editorial team will
review all abstracts, and authors of selected abstracts will be
invited to submit full manuscripts by 15 June 2015, with
peer-to-peer review occurring during July 2015. The volume will
be published, in print and online, in 2016.
For the volume, contributions may ultimately assume the form of
critical essays, case studies, or project assessments (among
other options). The word count of the submissions may vary from
2000 to 8000 words, depending on the submission. The editorial
team will consult with authors of selected abstracts about the
word count of their contributions.
If you have any questions about
Making Humanities Matter
or this CFP, then please email Jentery Sayers at
jentery@uvic.ca. Sayers is
Assistant Professor of English and Cultural, Social, and
Political Thought, as well as Director of the Maker Lab in the
Humanities, at the University of Victoria.
Debates in the Digital Humanities is a hybrid
print/digital publication stream that explores new debates as
they emerge. The first volume was published in 2012 and edited
by Matthew K. Gold. For future announcements and news about the
series, see
http://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/news
and the twitter hashtag #dhdebates.