CFP: DIGITAL HUMANITIES AUSTRALASIA 2014: Expanding Horizons

Call for Papers, Posters and BoFs.

DIGITAL HUMANITIES AUSTRALASIA 2014: Expanding Horizons

The Australasian Association for Digital Humanities (aaDH) is pleased to announce its second conference, to be held at The University of Western Australia, 18-21 March, 2014.

The aim of DHA 2014 is to advance digital methods, tools and projects within humanities research and develop new critical perspectives. The conference will provide a supportive, interdisciplinary environment to explore and share new and advanced research within the digital humanities.

The conference is sponsored by iVEC@UWA, The University of Western Australia, Edith Cowan University, Perth Convention Bureau, and the Australian Literature Westerly Centre, UWA.

HIGHLIGHTS

CONFERENCE WEBSITE: http://dha2014.org
CALL FOR PROPOSALS CLOSES: 14 September 2013
NOTIFICATION OF ACCEPTANCE: 14 October 2013
REGISTRATION NOW OPEN: http://dha2014.org/registration

PROPOSALS

The conference will feature long and short papers, posters and workshops, and informal birds of a feather discussions. We invite proposals on all aspects of digital humanities, and especially encourage papers showcasing new research and developments in the field and/or responding to the conference themes.

Proposals may focus on, but need not be limited to:

1. WORKING WITH TEXT such as

Critical text editing and electronic editions
Digitisation, text encoding and analysis
Text mining in historical scholarship
Book history, and digitising the book
Computational stylistics and distant reading
Digital curation and archives for cultural materials

2. NEW MEDIA and the DIGITAL such as;

Computational approaches in new media and Internet studies
The digital in culture, creativity, arts, music, performance

3. METHODS, APPROACHES, USERS such as;

Crowd-sourcing scholarship in the humanities
Quantitative methods in humanities research
Code studies, and code in the humanities
Mapping and spatial visualisation
Human Computer Interaction (HCI) in digital humanities research
Gaming for learning, serious gaming, and game archiving
Archaeology using digital methods including marine archaeology

4. WORKING WITH DATA

Modelling humanities data
Linked Data and the humanities

5. BUILDING the DH COMMUNITY and PRESENCE

Measuring and valuing research in the digital humanities
Institutionalisation, interdisciplinarity and collaboration
Curriculum and pedagogy in the digital humanities
Virtual research environments in humanities research

6. INDIGENOUS AND CROSS-CULTURAL DIGITAL RESEARCH

Cross-cultural studies
International comparisons

SUBMISSIONS

Abstracts of no more than 600 words, together with a biography of no more than 100 words, should be submitted to the Program Committee by 14 September 2013. All proposals will be fully refereed.

Proposals should be submitted via the online form at http://www.conftool.net/dha2014/
Please indicate whether you are proposing a poster, a short paper (10 mins + 5 mins questions), a long paper (25 mins + 5 mins questions), or birds of a feather session (60 mins). Proposals will be assessed in terms of alignment with the conference themes and the quality of research within these or related themes. Presenters will be notified of acceptance of their proposal on 14 October 2013.

PROPOSAL TYPES

1. Poster presentations
Poster presentations may include work-in-progress as well as demonstrations of computer technology, software and digital projects. A separate poster session will take place during one day of the conference, during which time presenters will need to be available to explain their work, share their ideas with other delegates, and answer questions. Presenters are encouraged to provide material and handouts with more detailed information and URLs. Poster guidelines are available on the conference website to help you prepare your poster.

2. Short papers
Short papers are allocated 10 minutes (plus 5 minutes for questions) and are suitable for describing work-in-progress and reporting on shorter experiments and software and tools in early stages of development.

3. Long papers
Long papers are allocated 25 minutes (plus 5 minutes for questions) and are intended for presenting substantial unpublished research and reporting on significant new digital resources or methodologies.

4. BoFs (Birds of a Feather sessions) are 60 minute sessions that should be used for guided discussions on one topic. BoFs are informal, open presentations for exploring key community issues and debates within the digital humanities.

Do you have an issue to discuss or are unsure how to progress a topic? For example:
Digital humanities what are the risks and rewards? or
Digital humanities and computer science as an interdisciplinary challenge where to from here?

60 minutes will be provided for each session. Each speaker will have a short time to present their points for discussion and the audience should also have an opportunity to comment (recommend allocation of up to 40% of the total time available).

On behalf of the Program Committee

Professor Hugh Craig, The University of Newcastle
Dr Craig Bellamy, The University of Melbourne

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