We are very pleased to announce that Miriam Posner will be the keynote speaker for DHCS 2018.
Dr. Posner is an assistant professor at the UCLA School of Information and the Program in Digital Humanities. She's also a digital humanist with interests in labor, race, feminism, and the history and philosophy of data. As a digital humanist, she is particularly interested in the visualization of large bodies of data from cultural heritage institutions, and the application of digital methods to the analysis of images and video. A film, media, and American studies scholar by training, she frequently writes on the application of digital methods to the humanities.
Please note the following:
* The deadline for submissions is July 15th. The DHCS 2018 CFP is available on Easychair (https://easychair.org/cfp/dhcs2018) . Follow the link or read on below for more information about the CFP. * Conference website is here: http://ctsdh.org/dhcs2018/
The Chicago Colloquium on Digital Humanities and Computer Science (DHCS) brings together researchers, scholars, librarians, and technologists in the humanities and computer science from across the country and around the world to examine the current state of digital humanities as a field of intellectual inquiry and to identify and explore new directions and perspectives for future research. We are pleased to announce that the thirteenth meeting of the DHCS will be held at the Water Tower Campus of Loyola University Chicago on November 9-11, 2018.
The conference is interested in proposals for papers, panels, workshops, and posters from people at all ranks whose work contributes to the themes of the conference. Potential topics include (but are not limited to):
* visualization tools, theories, methodologies, and workflows to make sense of Big Data; * digital approaches to textual studies; * public digital humanities; * digital accessibility; * digital humanities pedagogy; * preserving the digital humanities; * digital gaming, critical play, game design, and gaming culture; * creative coding and electronic literature; * studies on uses and behaviors of Social media sites users; * digital humanities technologies (e.g., mapping, text-mining); * digital humanities project design/management; * institutional DH partnerships and project-based collaborations; * community-based online media practices; * digital representation.
We hope the scope and topical breadth of the conference will stimulate an interdisciplinary dialogue that crosses traditional professional barriers. We are particularly interested in international and underserved populations' perspectives on digital humanities and computer science.
We welcome submissions of the following formats:
* Papers/Presentations (15 minutes) * Panels (60-90 minutes) * Posters * Workshops (60-90 minutes)
Applicants should submit a title and 200-300 word abstract along with a brief biography or C.V. by 15 July 2018 to EasyChair (https://easychair.org/cfp/dhcs2018) . Decisions will be made by early August. All presenters will have their registration fee for the conference waived. Presenters may have the opportunity to publish their papers in an online proceedings edition from the conference.
The DHCS is a consortium of six Chicago universities: DePaul University, Loyola University, Illinois Institute of Technology, Northwestern University, University of Illinois at Chicago, and the University of Chicago.
Please direct all questions to Kyle Roberts, Director of the Center for Textual Studies and Digital Humanities, Loyola University Chicago (kroberts2@luc.edu).