CFP: Special Issues on GenAI Tools within Libraries, Archives and Museums – Information Technology and Libraries #ITAL

Guest editors Ellen Schmid and Katy Miller invite you to submit a proposal for an article in an upcoming special issue of Information Technology and Libraries that will explore the integration of Generative AI tools within library, archive, and museum research environments. This special issue will be published in September 2026. We welcome contributions that provide practical insights, case studies, or user research on the development, deployment, and impact of AI-enhanced research tools. Topics of interest include user-focused interfaces, implementation processes, UX assessments, and the influence of GenAI on workflows, data analysis, and research practices. Articles should present first-hand experience with designing, testing, or evaluating AI helpers, and may cover commercial or open-source solutions. 

Submissions of up to 5,000 words will be accepted for a publication target of September 2026. 

Article proposals are due February 1, 2026 and include a 500-word abstract and a brief statement about the author’s experience in the field. Authors will be notified of acceptance in late February, with a submission of the first draft of the article (no more than 5,000 words) due May 1, 2026. Articles will go through the same rigorous peer review, copyediting, and proofreading process as any other ITAL article.

This issue will be guest edited by Ellen Schmid and Katy Miller in collaboration with ITAL’s Editor (Ken Varnum) and Assistant Editor (Joanna DiPasquale). 

Submit your proposal: https://forms.gle/aSjdjpvoR2QG4By87

Email questions to: 

New/Recent Publications

Articles

Williams, Andrew (2025) “Enrolled Deeds as Records and Archives in Jamaica,” Journal of Contemporary Archival Studies: Vol. 12, Article 17.
Available at: https://elischolar.library.yale.edu/jcas/vol12/iss1/17

Larson, Julia D. (2025) “Faxes, Emails, and CAD: A Case Study of the Changing Landscape in Born-digital Design Records, 1994-2006,” Journal of Western Archives: Vol. 16: Iss. 1, Article 6. DOI: 10.59620/2154-7149.1195. Available at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/westernarchives/vol16/iss1/6

Robert Olbrycht, Alfonso Bahillo Martínez, Ernesto Marcheggiani, Müge Akkar Ercan, Pinar Karagöz, Karol Kropidłowski, Giuseppe Pace, “Methods for real-time underground built heritage visualization enhancement,” Journal of Cultural Heritage, Volume 75, 2025, Pages 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.culher.2025.07.006.

Qingxia Meng, Chenshu Liu, Chongwen Liu, Qian Jiao, Shuangshuang Li, Haolin Fan, Songbin Ben, “A novel nanocomposite hydrogel system for synergistic paper deacidification and reinforcement,” Journal of Cultural Heritage, Volume 75, 2025, Pages 31-40. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.culher.2025.07.015.

Stanisław Piotr Skulimowski, Jerzy Montusiewicz, “A novel approach for assemblage of historical artefacts using the Levenshtein distance and feedback loop,” Journal of Cultural Heritage, Volume 75, 2025, Pages 158-167. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.culher.2025.07.007.

Books

The Afterlife of Data: What Happens to Your Information When You Die and Why You Should Care
Carl Öhman
University of Chicago Press, 2024

We the Dead: Preserving Data at the End of the World
Brian Michael Murphy
University of North Carolina Press, 2026

Digitization of Built Heritage: Approaches and Methods for Data Acquisition, Analysis, and Intervention
Cristina Cantagallo, Valentino Sangiorgio, Humberto Varum, Francesco Fiorito, Fabio Fatiguso
SpringerCham, 2025

The Indigenous Right of Reply to Archives: Working towards Indigenous Sovereignty, Healing, and Justice in Archival Practice
Edited By The Indigenous Archives Collective
Routledge, 2026

The Digital Medieval Manuscript: Material Approaches to Digital Codicology
Suzette van Haaren
Brill, 2025

Curating Transcultural Spaces: Perspectives on Postcolonial Conflicts in Museum Culture
Sarah Hegenbart
Bloomsbury, 2025

Women Proprietors of Copyright in England, 1675–1775
Leah Orr
Brill, 2025

Curating the Colonial Past: The ‘Migrated Archives’ and the Struggle for Kenya’s History
Riley Linebaugh
Cambridge University Press, 2025

Re-activating Indigenous Knowledge from Oral History: Landscape and Intangible Cultural Heritage in Greenland
Asta Mønsted
Routledge, 2026

Digital Content in Museums: Delivering Discoverable, Usable and Strategic Content in Museums, Galleries and Heritage Institutions
Georgina Brooke
Facet Publishing, 2025

Fundamentals of Metadata Management
Ole Olesen-Bagneux
O’Reilly, 2025

The Organization of Information
Daniel N. Joudrey
Bloomsbury, 2025

Podcasts

Future Knowledge: Preserving Government Information
August 2025

Electronic Freedom Foundation: Building and Preserving the Library of Everything
September 2025

Dissertation

Expanding the margins in the history of sexuality & galleries, libraries, archives, museums & special collections (GLAMS)
Watson, B. M., University of British Columbia, 2025

Novel

Archives of the Unexplained: Area 51 (Volume 1)
Archives of the Unexplained: Unwanted Guests (Volume 2)
Steve Foxe; illustrated by Fran Bueno
Macmillan, 2025

Children’s Book

Le Loup des Archives [The Wolf of the Archives]
Mathilde Morin

New Issue: Arbido

2025 Issue 2

Arbido is the Swiss professional journal for archives, libraries, and documentation. Arbido addresses the topics of preserving and transmitting socially relevant knowledge and information.

The current issue focuses on the topic of family archives. The subject is examined from various perspectives, including those of families themselves, archivists, genealogists, and archives. Various aspects such as cataloging, access, and preservation are discussed.

Table of contents

Bernasconi Laura, editor arbido
Editorial

Ackermann Nadja, Editor at arbido
Ein wichtiger Identitätstifter – Familienarchive aus der Perspektive der Familien
An important source of identity – family archives from the perspective of families

Bessourour Youssef, Archiviste aux Archives de l’Etat de Neuchâtel
Les Caisses de famille aux Archives de l’Etat de Neuchâtel : un outil de conservation des archives familiales
Les Caisses de famille aux Archives de l’Etat de Neuchâtel: an tool for conservation of the archives familiales

Ackermann Nadja, Editor at arbido
Familienarchive aus der Perspektive einer Archivarin
Family archives from the archivist’s perspective

Le Sommer Venice, archivist
Réseaux sociaux : les fonds familiaux d’aujourd’hui et demain ?
Réseaux socials: les fonds familiaux d’aujourd’hui et demain?

Lütteken Anett, Head of Manuscript Department, Zurich Central Library
Ein «Beweis schönen Gemeinsinnes»: Familienarchive in der Zentralbibliothek Zürich
A “proof of fine community spirit”: family archives in the Zurich Central Library

Bos François, Co-president and archivist of the association
Les archives de famille au sein des Archives de la Vie privée. Quelle histoire ?!
Les archives de famille au sein des Archives de la Vie privée. Source histoire?!

Münger Kurt, President of the Swiss Society for Family Research (SGFF/SSEG)
Familienarchive aus genealogischer Sicht
Family archives from a genealogical perspective

Kern Gilliane, archivist
Pertinence et impertinence des archives familiales – Partie II
Pertinence and impertinence of the family archives – Part II

Anelli Stefano, Collaboratore scientifico e archivista presso theArchivio di Stato del Cantone Ticino
Gestione dei fondi di famiglia all’Archivio di Stato del Cantone Ticino

Lepourtois Bérangère, Conservatrice du domaine de La Doges
Cornut Simren, Historical archivist
Les Archives de La Doges : le papier qui enveloppe la pierre
Les Archives de La Doges: the paper that enveloppe the pierre

CfA: History – Theory – Criticism Journal 2/2026: The AI Turn in Contemporary Historiography: Challenges, Applications, Reflections

Call for Articles

Special Issue 2/2026

The AI Turn in Contemporary Historiography: Challenges, Applications, Reflections

Deadline for submissions: 30 June 2026

Scope and Aims

Artificial intelligence has entered the field of historiography not as a neutral instrument but as a phenomenon that unsettles its very foundations. The capacity of large language models to generate and reorganize knowledge on a scale that surpasses human comprehension compels historians to reconsider the principles that have long defined their craft: authorship, interpretation, verification, and the human mediation of evidence. The accelerating automation of textual production introduces a cognitive threshold that challenges the historian’s ability to control, evaluate, and verify the narratives emerging from algorithmic systems. 

This transformation reveals both the potential and the vulnerability of historical knowledge. Artificial intelligence enables new ways of analyzing extensive textual corpora, translating and connecting sources, and recognizing patterns across linguistic and temporal boundaries. At the same time, it alters the conditions under which meaning is produced and received, eroding the distinction between human interpretation and computational synthesis. The opacity of large models, concealed in their training data and hierarchies of value, complicates one of the historian’s central tasks: the capacity to identify, understand, and critique bias within sources. 

The AI turn in historiography, therefore, marks more than a technical or methodological innovation. It signifies a shift in the scale and ecology of knowledge, shaped by the asymmetries of global computational power and by growing dependence on corporate infrastructures. This situation calls for reflection on how historical inquiry can preserve its ethical and interpretive integrity while adapting to an environment governed by automation, data abundance, and limited transparency.

This special issue of History – Theory – Criticism invites contributions that address these challenges. We seek studies and reflections that examine how artificial intelligence transforms the epistemology, methodology, and ethics of historical work, how historians can critically engage with opaque algorithmic systems, and how humanistic scholarship re-articulates alternative, locally grounded, and sustainable approaches to technological innovation. 

Themes and questions

1. Epistemology, authorship, and interpretation 

a) How does the massive production of synthetic text alter the relationship between information and interpretation? Can historians still claim control over the evidentiary process when relying on systems whose reasoning and corpus remain opaque? 

b) To what extent can AI be said to “understand” the past, and how does its pattern-based synthesis differ from human interpretation? 

c) What frameworks of transparency, citation, and disclosure are needed to ensure accountability in AI-assisted research and writing? 

d) How might the concept of authorship evolve when historical texts are increasingly co-produced by human and machine intelligence? 

2. Methodology, infrastructure, and the Black box 

a) General-purpose models reproduce values, hierarchies, and linguistic biases embedded in their training data, often without the user’s awareness. This deepens the “black box” problem and undermines one of the foundations of historical scholarship—the capacity to identify and critique bias in sources. 

b) How can historians engage critically with these systems without surrendering epistemic agency? 

c) What role might smaller, domain-specific, and ethically curated models play in building more transparent and interpretable infrastructures for historical research? 

d) How can collaboration between historians, computer scientists, and archivists foster local, open, and sustainable alternatives to corporate AI ecosystems? 

3. Cognitive, political, and environmental boundaries 

a) The automation of interpretation introduces a cognitive threshold: the scale of machine-generated material now exceeds what human scholars can meaningfully read or evaluate. This raises the question of how knowledge is curated, filtered, and trusted in a post-verificatory environment. 

b) At the same time, the concentration of computational resources in a few global centers reinforces inequalities between academic communities and widens the gap between those who design AI and those who merely consume it.

c) Finally, the environmental and energy costs of large-scale AI infrastructures compel the humanities to consider the ecological ethics of technological progress. What forms of scholarship might align critical inquiry with sustainability and local autonomy? 

4. Education, practice, and the future of humanistic knowledge 

a) How can historical education cultivate critical AI literacy rather than simple tool proficiency? 

b) What pedagogical strategies can help students and researchers maintain interpretive depth and ethical reflection in an environment saturated by generative systems?

c) Should AI be understood as an auxiliary method, a paradigm shift, or a mirror revealing the epistemological foundations of humanistic knowledge itself? 

d) How can universities and professional organizations shape guidelines that safeguard integrity and creativity while embracing innovation? 

Submission guidelines

Submissions and inquiries should be sent to the Editor-in-Chief via email. 

Language: English 

Text length: articles 36–72,000 characters including notes; discussion papers 18–36,000 characters; reviews 9–18,000 characters. All articles should include an abstract (150–200 words) and 4–5 keywords. 

Format: Microsoft Word (*.docx) or Libre Office (*.odt), following the DTK Manual of Style and Ethical Code 

Peer review: Double-blind by two independent reviewers 

Deadline: 30 June 2026 

Publication: Winter 2026, Diamond Open Access 

Guest Editors: Jaromír Mrňka, Jiří Hlaváček

About the journal

Dějiny – teorie – kritika (History – theory – criticism) is a peer-reviewed, Diamond open-access journal, founded in 2004 and published by the Faculty of Humanities at Charles University. Indexed in SCOPUS, ERIH PLUS, EBSCOhost, CEEOL, and DOAJ, the journal provides a platform for theoretically grounded and methodologically innovative approaches to the past. 

Contact Information

Petr Wohlmuth, Ph.D. (Editor-in-Chief): Petr.Wohlmuth@fhs.cuni.cz

Journal website: https://ojs.cuni.cz/dejinyteoriekritika

Contact Email

Petr.Wohlmuth@fhs.cuni.cz

URL

https://ojs.cuni.cz/dejinyteoriekritika

CFP: ELUNA 2026 Practical Applications and General Product/Tool Demonstrations Track (April 29 – May 1, 2026 – Los Angeles, California) – Ex Libris

ELUNA Call for Proposals–Practical Applications and General Product/Tool Demonstrations Track

The ELUNA 2026 Annual Meeting Program Planning Committee is excited to open the Call for Proposals for sessions in Practical Applications and General Product/Tool Demonstrations! We invite you to submit your 45-minute breakout session ideas for the 2026 Annual Meeting by January 15, 2026.

Our conference theme is “Libraries Always Changing.” Libraries and archives are some of the best organizations to address this. All of you adapt to continue to create and improve connections by integrating various technologies allowing your patrons to access and interact with information and other resources in new formats via different tools. You pioneer new programs to fulfill community needs as your visions help you champion your patrons. We look forward to seeing your unique spin on this topic.

The Practical applications & general product/tool demonstrations track encourages proposals for all topics, and here are just a few to think about!

  • Workflows and projects in and across acquisitions, cataloging/metadata management, circulation, resource sharing, etc.
  • Cross-departmental collaborative projects
  • “Cool tools” that integrate with, or help with, Alma workflows
  • Metadata management
  • Data cleanup
  • Managing or using COUNTER statistics 
  • Cross-training/ changing jobs and applying skills from one module to another
  • Documenting institutional knowledge, recording workflows, preparing for retirements and other changes 
  • Changes in the ILL landscape

Submit your session proposal(s) by the January 15, 2026 deadline!  Once again, we are using the Dryfta platform to collect your proposal submissions.

  • Visit our Ex Libris Knowledge Days and ELUNA Conference 2026 event page
  • Log in with your credentials used last year (or create a new account if you didn’t create an account previously by choosing Attendee Registration – Create Account)
  • Click your name menu > My Submissions
  • Click “New Submissions” on the My Submissions page
  • On the Submission form, click once on the Event Name in the Submission Type field to show the Annual Meeting proposal fields – even if Annual Meeting is already displaying
  • Enter your proposal information (you can save and complete the presentation proposal later if needed)

Want to review the proposal form fields for the Annual Meeting without logging into Dryfta? Or would you like some guidance filling them in? Visit the ELUNA Proposal Tips page for more information.

You’ll see more reminder messages from us throughout the 2026 Annual Meeting lifecycle. And even if you are not interested in presenting at the Annual Meeting this year, we hope you plan to join us for one or more ELUNA 2026 Conference events at the Westin Bonaventure in Los Angeles, California.

  • ELUNA Developers Day+: April 27 – 28, 2026
  • ELUNA Analytics Afternoon: April 28, 2026
  • ELUNA Annual Meeting:  April 29 – May 1, 2026

Looking for hands-on training for Ex Libris products? Ex Libris will offer Knowledge Days as a pre-conference event on April 27 – 28, 2026.

If you have any questions about the ELUNA 2026 Annual Meeting or the other ELUNA 2026 Conference events, send them to ELUNA’s LibAnswers Queue for the ELUNA 2026 Planning Team to answer.

We are happy to answer questions about the Practical Applications & General Product/Tool Demonstrations sessions (our emails hyperlinked below).  Hope to see you in Los Angeles! 

Rebecca Hyams, Meghan Lenahan, and Keelan Weber

Co-chairs, Practical Applications & General Product/Tool Demonstrations Track

2026 Oral History Association Annual Meeting: Call for Proposals

2026 Oral History Association Annual Meeting: Call for Proposals

October 14-17, 2026 | Portland, OR

Landscapes of Memory

Our memories are shaped by the landscapes we inhabit—both real and imagined. These landscapes are shifting in the face of environmental change, political instability, and an ongoing sense of crisis. Ancient connections with the natural world are being severed, and people are displaced not only from this innate connection to the earth but also from familiar ways of living and relating to one another. As oral historians, we witness narrators’ struggles to imagine new identities within this changing ecology.

For the 2026 Oral History Association Annual Meeting in Portland, Oregon, we invite contributions from around the world —from those working in academia, advocacy, education, and community-based practice—that speak to how people shape and are shaped by the landscapes they inhabit, traverse, defend, or are forced to leave behind. We welcome proposals that explore relationships to land, memory, and movement across shifting environmental, political, and cultural boundaries.

The Pacific Northwest offers a vivid backdrop for these conversations. Portland is where many Indian tribes collaborate on river and salmon habitat restoration. It is where Governor Tom McCall pioneered environmental laws that became a national model, and where artists, writers, and community organizers have long given voice to place, displacement, and environmental justice. The region’s convergence of urban innovation, protected wilderness, and layered histories invites wide-ranging discussions about how oral histories illuminate ecological crises, stewardship, and resilience.

Possible areas of focus include, but are not limited to:

  • Ecological knowledge, Indigenous storytelling, and traditional/local epistemologies
  • Displacement, migration, activism, and environmental change
  • Borderlands and their stories—whether shaped by international borders, colonial legacies, or climate crises—and the questions they raise about identity, belonging, and resilience
  • Foodways, coastal livelihoods, sacred geographies, and senses of place grounded in memory
  • How digital tools, social media, and emerging technologies shape or amplify environmental narratives and collective memory
  • How oral history bridges local and global contexts in documenting environmental change
  • How people remember and make meaning of the places they have lost—or reclaimed
  • What it means to belong to a place today
  • Interdisciplinary approaches—from Memory Studies, Environmental History, and related fields

We encourage proposals from academics, independent scholars, activists, museum curators, tribal historians, teachers, students, archivists, documentary filmmakers, artists, creative writers, ethnographers, and other practitioners whose work relates to these themes. The Program Committee welcomes broad and creative interpretations of the conference theme and encourages innovative formats, such as workshops, interactive sessions, performances, digital media presentations, and collaborative community reports.

To submit a proposal, please click here.

To view the submission guidelines, please click here.

Contact Email

oha@oralhistory.org

URL: https://oralhistory.org/2026-call-for-proposals/

CFP: “Political Activism and material culture: definitions, practices, periodisations. A dialogue between researchers, archivists and museum curators”, ACTIVATE – MSCA Horizon Europe Project, University of Padua, 4-5 May 2026

This workshop is part of the project “ACTIVATE: The activist, the archivist and the researcher. Novel collaborative strategies of transnational research, archiving and exhibiting social and political dissent in Europe (19th-21st centuries)”. ACTIVATE receives funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2023 research and innovation program under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 101182859.

The project was launched in January 2025 and explores in a 4-year initiative practices of collecting, archiving, and promoting documents, objects, and data, contributing to a renewed European history of social and political dissent from the early 19th century to the present day.

Further information about the project is available at https://activate-horizon.eu/

“Political Activism and material culture: definitions, practices, periodisations. A dialogue between researchers, archivists and museum curators”
Call for Paper | ACTIVATE WP3 Workshop #1
May 4-5 2026 | University of Padua and online
This workshop aims at bringing together academic, archival, museum partners with specific expertise on the relationship between politics and material culture. In recent decades, historiography has undergone a ‘material turn’ that has led to a less asymmetrical focus on the relationship between human and non-human, in particular objects and artefacts. This has produced new perspectives on the construction of social identities, the experiences of consumption and the trajectories of everyday life. At the same time, less attention has been paid to the “material history of politics” focusing on objects as key elements of political mobilisation. From the late 18th century revolutions to the recent Gen Z protests in Nepal, Philippines or Madagascar, the process of politicisation has been expressed through ‘disobedient’ objects, capable of evoking, striking and provoking in a politically significant way. Physical objects can play all sorts of roles in collective action, as we have seen in many recent movements, where material participation has been particularly widespread and important. The main objective of this workshop is to look at the history of militant culture by focusing on a scarcely developed aspect: the link between political experience and material culture. It aims to do so by promoting close cooperation between researchers and those involved in collecting, cataloguing and exhibiting such documentary material.

Workshop topics:
1) Definition of political/militant objects
How to define political objects from the perspective of historians, archivist and museums? What makes an object political, and specifically militant? What objects has political activism imagined and used in its long history, stretching from the age of revolutions to the present day? This question is particularly interesting in relation to objects that do not appear political at first glance. Are objects like Annemarie Renger’s dancing shoes or Margaret Thatcher’s handbags political objects? Bras and false eyelashes are certainly not political objects, but they became so in the feminist struggles of the 1970s. The issue is closely linked to the uses and practices that these objects generate from time to time and to the different forms of material participation that they entail, even in everyday life. It allows us to reflect on different chronologies and phases of political activism, focusing on four themes: revolutionary movements; feminisms; environmental struggles; international solidarity. A definition of political objects should go beyond time periods and materiality and also address the political dimension of everyday objects.

2) History and methods of collecting militant objects
Since the late 18th century, revolutions and protests, as well as party and grassroots mobilisations, have shown that social and political activism often leads to the preservation of material objects bearing witness to the engagement of individuals, groups, and associations. Archives, like historiography, have so far focused more on written holdings than 3-D objects and are now facing a new challenge. Museums, especially historical ones, are certainly more accustomed to collecting objects, especially those with recognized historical-artistic value. Yet political and militant objects often lack such value. How were collections formed that related to activism? Where, by whom, and for what purposes were they kept? When were they turned into heritage? What country-specific differences exist with regard to the history of collecting militant objects?

3) Cataloguing and preparing metadata
Objects need to be catalogued for making them accessible to research. Therefore, questions about cataloguing and enriching metadata a central: How can a political object be described – WHAT is an object, HOW is it catalogued, and HOW does it fit into archive/library and museums structures? How do museums and archives identify and record political objects in their collections? What parameters are used to define political objects, and how is this reflected in the metadata? Which (national) standards such as ministerial requirements for metadata standards for object cataloging are used at the respective institutions that are applied during cataloging and what perspectives and problems arise due to the different nature of the description: use of data fields and how do they correspond to standards known from the archival sector, are there interfaces?

4) Preserving, reproducing, and enhancing material sources
How should different materials be handled? Paper is generally patient when stored properly, but how should fragile materials such as textiles, which are not made to last forever, be handled? Different materials place different demands on packaging, climatic conditions, and storage. Archives and museums face the challenge of preserving these materials in the long term. Dealing with objects that are irrevocably subject to decay is also a challenge that particularly affects AV materials and forces many institutions to act. Digitization is not a solution to this problem, but a resource that gives objects a second life and new uses, providing novel means of access, consultation, interpretation, and valorization. To date, militant objects have rarely been central to heritage valorization projects: thus, beyond their and museums present their collections and narrate their history.

We encourage researchers, archivists, and museum curators to submit papers addressing these topics either from a theoretical and methodological perspective or by presenting specific case studies or experiences.

Please submit your proposal, with a maximum of 3,000 characters including spaces, along with a brief CV, by 28 January 2026 to this email: activatewp3@gmail.com

Organizing Committee:
Carlotta Sorba (University of Padua)
Anja Kruke (Friedrich Ebert Foundation)
Laura Valentini (Friedrich Ebert Foundation)
Alessio Petrizzo (University of Padua)

Contact Email

activatewp3@gmail.com

URL: https://activate-horizon.eu/

CFP: Thinking Through Printing symposium

Thinking Through Printing
A Symposium on Book Arts Studios and
Book History Scholarship
University of Toronto  |  June 4 – 6, 2026
www.ThinkingThroughPrinting2026.ca

Dates: June 4 – 6, 2026
Location: University of Toronto (in-person only)
Proposal due date: January 19th, 2026, 11:59 pm EST
Submit proposals to: Submission Form

For scholars of the history of books, reading, authorship, design, and publishing, first-hand experiences with the technologies and practices of the book arts have moved from the margins to the centre of their discipline. Experiential bibliography has flourished within academic programs in book history and adjacent fields, which are increasingly populated by aspiring printer-bibliographers, faculty and students alike. To that end, book arts studios are becoming vital spaces for book history education and research.

Essential for the long-term success of these initiatives is a coherent and focused conversation on the rationales, educational goals, and research potentials of print studios and other spaces for experiential bibliography. As a follow-up to the 2025 Building Book Labs symposium at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, this event will gather present and future leaders working at the intersection of book history, research creation, and digital scholarship to reflect on achievements, share strategies, explore challenges, and plan future projects that combine book history scholarship and experiential learning in the book arts.

The Thinking Through Printing symposium will offer participants two full days of experiential workshops, roundtables, and exhibitions (June 5-6), plus a public keynote talk by Ryan Cordell (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; June 4), founding director of the Skeuomorph Press & Book Lab.

What are the research questions in book history that can only be answered via work in a print studio? How does experiential bibliography open up areas of inquiry for students and advanced researchers alike? In an age of unsettling technological change, what role do older printing technologies and practices have in helping society understand the power of words, images, and material artifacts? How might we understand the past differently by making bookish artifacts of our own within communities of practitioner-scholars? How can research creation projects that emerge from these book arts studios be better supported and recognized in academic contexts?

Our symposium will address these high-level questions through a multi-modal approach that reflects the interdisciplinary nature of the book arts and book history, combining roundtable discussions, experiential workshops, student-led poster sessions, rare book library tours, a keynote lecture and roundtable (both open to the public), and other activities.

We invite brief statements of interest (max. 300 words) which address: 1) your interest and experience in the field; and 2) a proposal for a specific topic, question, or experiential workshop that you would like to address or have addressed by the symposium. For those interested in facilitating a 90-minute workshop, please provide a short description of the activity, its goals, and tools, supplies, and other resources needed for the workshop. Workshops could be hands-on, discussion-based, or both.

Topics for workshops, roundtables, and subsequent discussions will be chosen by the program committee with the goal of representing a broad range of approaches and outputs in experiential bibliography.

Examples of workshop and roundtable topics include:

  • Interdisciplinary research methods combining book arts, book history, and digital humanities;
  • Book arts studios as sites for pedagogical research;
  • Advocacy for and implementation of experiential, studio-based research creation in the humanities;
  • Connections between contemporary and historical practices in printing;
  • Material and practical challenges in the implementation of experiential activities;
  • Productive connections (and tensions) between digital and analog technologies, practices, and ways of thinking about material texts; what can digital scholarship learn from the book arts (and vice versa)?
  • Working and teaching with artifacts that have culturally specific histories (e.g. Indigenous type, as potential objects for repatriation), whose provenance is complex and raises ethical questions about their use

Please fill out this Submission Form to apply. The deadline for proposals is Monday, January 19, 2026 at 11:59 pm EST.

Any questions about the event or the application process may be sent to thinkingthroughprinting@utoronto.ca.

CFP: Translating Ruins: Mutable Grounds, Mediated Encounters, and Mobile Precarities

We are delighted to invite scholars from all disciplines to contribute to the forthcoming edited volume with Routledge: Translating Ruins: Mutable Grounds, Mediated Encounters, and Mobile Precarities. 

In an era of climate crisis, extractivism, war, forced displacement, migration, and rapid urban change, ruins have become pervasive. Contemporary ruin scholarship has moved beyond the aesthetic of Ruinenlust (‘ruin lust’) to recognise ruins as critical thresholds that illuminate entanglements of pasts, presents, and futures (López Galviz et al., 2017). This edited volume examines how translational practices – broadly conceived as complex semiotic practices that are materially grounded and embedded in sociohistorical, ethical and creative relations – engage with historical and contemporary ruins, and how such practices shape the reconstruction, reinterpretation, remembrance and governance of contested ruin-sites, wider processes of ruination, and forms of ruin-related heritage.

We invite critical and practice-based contributions that engage with the complexities of translating ruins. We especially welcome proposals from Translation Studies, Critical Heritage Studies, Postcolonial Studies, Memory Studies, Urban Studies, Cultural Geography, Art History and Visual Culture, and related fields.

Topics may include, but are not limited to:  

  • The transformation of ruins into museums, monuments, heritage sites, and immersive multimedia formats. 
  • The redevelopment or repurposing of ruins into green spaces, public facilities, cultural infrastructures, or commercial complexes – spaces that may themselves enter new cycles of decay and renewal.  
  • Multilingual and multimodal interpreting and translation practices within ruin-related museums, heritage sites, communities, or institutional settings.  
  • Activist or community-based translation practices, or artistic interventions in sites of historical or ongoing ruination.  
  • Intermedial and multimodal representations and translations of ruins and ruin narratives across diverse platforms and formats, including social media, blogs, travel vlogs, livestreams, and digital archives.  
  • The translation and resignification of ruin-related textual fragments, archival materials, photographs, and other material remnants. 
  • The translation of narratives that foreground the material presence and historical specificity of ruins, and the lived experience of those who built, inhabited, or survived ruins. 
  • The transposition of ruin objects to new sites and interpretive contexts (e.g., travelling exhibitions, diasporic archives).   

Submission details:

Please submit a proposal of up to 300 words as a single Word document (.doc or .docx) to translatingruins@gmail.com with the subject line: “[Your Name] – Chapter Proposal”. 

The Word document should include: 

  • A provisional chapter title 
  • An abstract (maximum 300 words, excluding references) and up to five keywords 
  • A short biographical note (maximum 150 words), including your affiliation and contact details
  • A brief statement indicating whether the proposed chapter will include any line illustrations, photographs, or tables, and whether colour reproduction will be required

The deadline for abstract submission is 23 February 2026. Full chapters are due 30 September 2026.

Contact Information

Yaqi Xi (yaqi.xi@warwick.ac.uk), University of Warwick, UK.

Shaoyu Yang (shaoyu.yang@warwick.ac.uk), University of Warwick, UK.

Contact Email

translatingruins@gmail.com

Attachments

CfP_Translating Ruins

CFP: Bibliographical Society of Canada Conference, June 2026

The Many Hands of Book History
Conference of the Bibliographical Society of Canada / Société bibliographique du Canada
8-9 June 2026, University of Toronto

The Bibliographical Society of Canada invites proposals for its annual conference on the theme, The Many Hands of Book History. Drawing on Robert Darnton’s foundational article “What is the History of Books”(1985), this conference turns toward the expanded, evolving, and interdependent networks that shape book history. Darnton’s Communications Circuit model traced the movement of books through multiple hands and bibliographers today continue to stretch, challenge, and reimagine that circuit. This year’s theme considers books not simply as paper, ink, and binding, but as profoundly collaborative objects shaped at every stage by labour, creativity, culture, ownership, and interpretation.

We invite participants to explore the diverse social, material, and cultural processes through which books—broadly conceived—have been created, preserved, circulated, and transformed. We encourage papers that explore interactions between any hands involved with the book, including creators, artists, printers, illustrators, binders, publishers, booksellers, readers, collectors, archivists, scholars, and communities. We also welcome contributions that provoke new methodological, material, and theoretical questions—especially from disciplines and practitioners who may not always identify themselves as “book people.”

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Materiality and Meaning: How formats, illustration, binding, decoration, wear, repair, and digital remediation shape the interpretation, circulation, and preservation of textual objects.
  • Books as Collaborative and Communal Objects: The ways in which book creation fosters shared identities, reflects or silences human experience, and emerges from the labour and creativity of diverse communities.
  • Research Centered on Marginalized Voices: Studies of book culture by, for, and/or from 2SLGBTQIA+ communities, BIPOC communities, persons with disabilities, women, and/or religious or cultural groups.
  • Analogue and Digital Materialities: From parchment, paper, ink, and leather to bits, bytes, algorithms, and born-digital forms; questions of reprinting, digitization, open access, and remediation.
  • Tools, Methods, and Approaches: Bibliography, critical theory, scientific analysis, digital humanities, artificial intelligence, data-driven research, and other interdisciplinary or transdisciplinary methods.
  • Pedagogy and Practice: Teaching with books and cultural heritage materials; hands-on learning; community-engaged scholarship; and the impact of archival and material encounters on students, communities, and other learners.
  • The Diverse Forms and Functions of “The Book” Across Time and Place: Manuscripts, archives, zines, artists’ books, digital platforms, print ephemera, community publications, and experimental or hybrid forms.

This conference emphasizes welcoming participation across fields and career stages, including students, early-career researchers, conservators, librarians, book artists, digital humanists, bibliographers, and scholars working within or alongside book history and bibliography. Proposals may engage with material, visual, scientific, technological, or community-based approaches; with Canadian or international contexts; and with intersectional, cross-cultural, and transnational perspectives.

Proposals:

Proposals for twenty-minute conference presentations, entire panels (three presentations), or hour-long workshops may be submitted in English or French. Proposals, which must be submitted via the online form, must include the following elements:

  • Title of presentation/panel/workshop
  • Abstract indicating argument, context, and methods (max. 250 words)
  • Bio (50-100 words) including full name, professional designation (e.g., graduate student, faculty, librarian, researcher etc.), and institutional affiliation or place

In order to accommodate financial and accessibility issues, this conference will be presented in a limited hybrid capacity. Please specify whether your proposal is for an in-person or online presentation when submitting. Priority will be given to in-person presentations, and online presentations must be recorded and submitted prior to the conference.

Applicants to the Emerging Scholar Prize must also include:

  • Cover letter (1 p.) explaining the applicant’s suitability for the prize
  • CV (max. 3 pp.)
  • Proof of student status or of graduation within the past two years (copy of diploma, student identification, or official or unofficial transcript)

Deadline: 30 January 2026

For more information: https://event.fourwaves.com/bsc/pages