New Issue: Journal of Documentation, Special Issue: Artificial Intelligence for Cultural Heritage Materials

Journal of Documentation, Special Issue: Artificial Intelligence for Cultural Heritage Materials, volume 80 issue 5
(partial open access)

Guest editorial: Artificial intelligence for cultural heritage materials
Glen Layne-Worthey, J. Stephen Downie

Computer vision and machine learning approaches for metadata enrichment to improve searchability of historical newspaper collections
Dilawar Ali, Kenzo Milleville, Steven Verstockt, Nico Van de Weghe, Sally Chambers, Julie M. Birkholz

Automated Dewey Decimal Classification of Swedish library metadata using Annif software Open access
Koraljka Golub, Osma Suominen, Ahmed Taiye Mohammed, Harriet Aagaard, Olof Osterman

Unsilencing colonial archives via automated entity recognition
Mrinalini Luthra, Konstantin Todorov, Charles Jeurgens, Giovanni Colavizza

User perspectives through cross-connections. The role of archives as part of the German digital research data infrastructure
Kai Naumann, Andreas Neuburger

Datafication of audiovisual archives: from practice mapping to a thinking model
Yuchen Yang

: developing AI tools to link and support community-generated digital cultural heritage
Ewan D. Hannaford, Viktor Schlegel, Rhiannon Lewis, Stefan Ramsden, Jenny Bunn, John Moore, Marc Alexander, Hannah Barker, Riza Batista-Navarro, Lorna Hughes, Goran Nenadic

Unlocking a multimodal archive of Southern Chinese martial arts through embodied cues
Yumeng Hou, Fadel Mamar Seydou, Sarah Kenderdine

Validating predictions of burial mounds with field data: the promise and reality of machine learning Open access
Adela Sobotkova, Ross Deans Kristensen-McLachlan, Orla Mallon, Shawn Adrian Ross

New Issue: Comma

Comma: Volume 2022 Issue 1
(subscription)

Implementing the Digital Transfer of Records from Public Institutions: The Experience of the National Archives of Chile
Gabriela Andaur and Pilar Díaz

Linking Archives, Linked Open Data, and the Development of the World-Wide Directory of Repositories Holding Archives of Literature and Art
Elizabeth Bassett, Heather Dean, and David C. Sutton

Addressing Imbalances of the Colonial Heritage at the National Archives of Zimbabwe: Imagining Inclusive Archivy!
Amos Bishi

Not Only Cultural Heritage: The Economic Value of Archives
Lucia Biondi and Debora Chiarelli

Das Sächsische elektronische Kommunalarchiv: Eine Lösung für die Erhaltung der digitalen Kultur der Städte
Paolo Cecconi

European Digital Treasures: A Project to Address the European Archives’ Challenges
Cristina Díaz Martínez, Leonard Callus, and Zoltán Szatucsek

#archivesgateway: The State Archives of Palermo Opens Itself Up to the City
Francesca Di Pasquale, Floriana Giallombardo, Carmen Genovese, and Flora La Sita

Why Archivists Need to Know about Copyright
Jean Dryden

Bridging the Gaps Between Communities and their Memories: Comparing Community-Based Archives in Five Countries
Andrew Flinn, Magdalena Wiśniewska-Drewniak, Mônica Tenaglia, Mengqui Li, and Luisa Seixas

Combler les fossés: quand les archives pallient aux lacunes de la mémoire individuelle
Pierre Flückiger and Anouk Dunant Gonzenbach

Trentino’s Historical Archives Portal: A Tool to “Bridging the Gap”?
Stefania Franzoi and Fiammetta Baldo

Breaking the Library Walls, Bridging the Gap with Generation Next
Vicky Gerontopoulou, Maria Pazarli, and Kostas Diamantis

Connecting the Archives: Collaboration between the National Archives of Japan and Local Archives
Yamatani Hideyuki

Disruption of Academic Archival Practice: A Preliminary Examination of Finding Aids
Lisa Lawlis and Anne Quirk

Federating the Authorities and Training the Employees in Order to Bridge the Digital Gap: The Project “Protocollo Informatico Trentino” (P.I.Tre.)
Annamaria Lazzeri and Carlo Bortoli

European Union, Archives, Rights
Tommaso Maria Rossi

Archives Buildings: Witnesses of the Past, Bridging to Modernity
France Saïe-Belaïsch and Odile Welfelé

A Novel Heterocyclic Fungicide (1, 3, 4-THIADIAZOLO [3, 2-a] PYRIMIDIN-5-ONES) Plays a Vital Role to Inhibit Fungus from Archival Cultural Heritage
Sarvesh Singh

Strengthening the Connections Between the Citizens and the Hellenic Parliament
Iouliani Theodosi

New Perspectives for Access to Archival Heritage in Italy between Privacy, Copyright, and Protection Rules
Silvia Filippin and Mirco Modolo

New Perspectives / Nouvelles Perspectives

Recommendations on Using Artificial Intelligence in Archival Appraisal and Selection
Rebecca Y. Bayeck, Giovanni Colavizza, Jenny Bunn, Mark Bell, and Souvick Ghosh

New Issue: Archival Science

Archival Science: International Journal on Recorded Information vol. 24 issue 3
(open access)

It’s only a mirage: Tahar Djaout’s critique of logocentrism in L’Invention du désert
Abdelkader Aoudjit

Scouring the desert: political violence traceability in the Americas
Paola Diaz, Rodrigo Suarez

Finding values, building communities: development of an archival appraisal system for the Thai public sector
Naya Sucha-xaya

An opportunity to stay connected: documenting personal communication records of military personnel
Allan A. Martell, Edward Benoit III

Archiving difficult realities: a systematic investigation of records related to sexual violence in US college and university archives
Ana Roeschley, Julie Miller, Alison Nikitopoulos, Morgan Davis Gieringer, Jessica Holden

The disposal of paper public documents in the face of their digitization: what is lost?
Josimas Eugênio Silva, Michael David de Souza Dutra

Creating a representative archive of performance practice at the National Theatre of Great Britain
Erin Lee

Building ignorance by disseminating “evidence”: an agnotological look into the digital archives of the Islamic Republic of Iran
Natalia Pashkeeva

Instituting a framework for reparative description
Stephanie M. Luke, Sharon Mizota

CFP: Media Fields Journal, Issue 19: Archival Elements

Call for Papers: Archival Elements
Media Fields Journal, Issue 19

Submission Deadline: October 31, 2024

In 2008, the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF) released its 70 th anniversary manifesto reaffirming film’s status as the “optimal archival storage” of the moving image. “Don’t throw film away!” they urged, for unlike its digital successors, film elements tangibly embody traces of their own material history alongside a bygone cultural heritage. “No matter what technologies may emerge,” they write, existing film elements “connect us to the certainties of the past.”

For film archivists, the element is the inert container of audiovisual content subject to archival care and maintenance—the original artifact and source of any material or digital copies to come. Indeed, across scholarly and archival spheres alike, the element has remained the intrinsic foundation of the moving image, its archival preservation, and the theoretical study thereof. Whereas Caroline Frick has considered the ways that “original” media elements become bound up with notions of authenticity, cultural heritage, and nationhood, scholar-practitioners have increasingly turned to what Giovanna Fossati calls film’s “archival life,” a term that seeks to discursively address the expanding myriad of physical and digital spaces required in contemporary preservation. How, Fossati posits, might scholars and archivists alike better account for the ways that film and media are at once preserved, historized and politicized by archival processes? In other words, what might be gained from reflecting seriously on how different kinds of media traverse the archival sphere? What happens when a given audiovisual element also becomes an archival one?

This issue of Media Fields seeks to build on these conversations by examining how the proliferation and mediation of the archive and its elements is productive. Contemporary archival elements are often integrated into processes involving other forms of media, such as database and metadata development, digitization, interactive and public-facing archival digital interfaces, and larger multimedia collections. We ask: what kinds of political, theoretical, and practical connections arise when thinking about and doing the archive in these different spatial ways —traditional, alternative, or otherwise—and how might we better place these approaches in discursive conjunction with one another? Further, what are new ways in which theory (archival and otherwise) might intervene and inform archival practice, and historicizing therein? In turn, what does this mean for the (after)lives of the media themselves?

The Media Fields Editorial Collective at UC Santa Barbara’s Department of Film and Media Studies welcomes submissions that critically engage the connections between space, media, and archival practice. We seek essays of 1500–2500 words, digital art projects, and interviews from scholars and practitioners alike. Potential submission topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Preservation: Precarity and decay, fragility, physicality, ontologies of the film and media archive and its objects, broadly construed
  • Cataloging: Metadata organization, archival etymology, reparative description and taxonomies, hierarchical data structures
  • Collection management: Power and ethics, restitution and social justice, collections policy, community oversight, institutional and/or community-based funding structures
  • Memory: Personal, collective, historical and/or cultural memories, archival modes of erasure, loss, and silence
  • Curation: Accessibility, community engagement, digital interfaces
  • Provenance: Found footage, orphan films, transnational displacement
  • Archival space: Traditional institutions, digital databases, garages, basements

Past Media Fields issues and submission guidelines may be found at mediafieldsjournal.org.

Please email all inquiries and submissions to issue co-editors Kelsey Moore and Hannah Garibaldi at submissions@mediafieldsjournal.org by October 31, 2024.

Contact Email

submissions@mediafieldsjournal.org

URL

http://mediafieldsjournal.org/call-for-submissions/

RFP: AI for Access

Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to announce a Request for Proposals (RFP) for a Survey and Assessment Analyst to support an exciting new project funded by the Society of American Archivists (SAA) sponsored by the CLIR/DLF Born-Digital Access Working Group (BDAWG). The “AI for Access” project aims to assess how U.S. archival professionals are utilizing AI/ML tools to facilitate access to digital archival materials.

Project Overview: The “AI for Access” study is designed to explore the use of AI/ML in archival settings, particularly in the face of increasing digital collection demands. This two-part project includes a comprehensive literature review and a survey distributed to archival professionals to gather both quantitative and qualitative data on their use of and/or perspectives on AI/ML tools.

We are seeking a qualified Survey and Assessment Analyst to:

  • Review and refine our preliminary survey design.
  • Determine appropriate survey models and sampling methods.
  • Oversee the distribution and promotion of the survey.
  • Analyze and synthesize survey findings.
  • Prepare a final report detailing the results.

Key Details:

  • Contract Period: October 1, 2024 – January 31, 2024
  • Budget: $2,500
  • Deadline for Proposal Submission: September 26, 2024, by 4:30 PM EST
  • Proposal Submission: Proposals should be sent via email to Dara Baker at dabaker.research@gmail.com.

How to Apply: Interested applicants should submit a proposal that includes a detailed description of how they will meet the RFP requirements, along with their qualifications and pricing information. Preference will be given to proposals that address all aspects of the RFP comprehensively.

Please review the full RFP document for additional details on the scope of work, evaluation criteria, and submission guidelines.

We welcome any questions regarding this RFP, which should be submitted in writing by September 10, 2024, at 4:30 PM EST. All questions and responses will be shared by September 20, 2024.

We look forward to receiving your proposals and potentially working together on this important project.

Best regards,

AI for Access Project Team–
Christina Velazquez Fidlershe/her/hersHead of Digital CollectionsThe Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley | Huichin Ohlone Land

US Latina & Latino Oral History Journal—Editor Search

The US Latina & Latino Oral History Journal—Editor Search

 Pioneering scholar in 1971 Juan Gómez-Quiñones recognized oral history interviews “an indispensable source.” In 2012, scholars Maria McDonald and Abraham Hoffman urged others to interview more Chicano activists – “living documents” – while there was still time.

 In recognition of oral history as an essential methodology to research the Latina/o experience in the US, the Journal was established in 2017. Its goals: to promote high-quality, peer-reviewed academic research, providing a platform and feedback to authors; spotlighting successful community efforts that include oral histories; reviewing books that used oral history to study the Latina/o history in the US. Now in its ninth year, the journal seeks a new editor for a four-year term (2026-2029). The new editor will serve as the Associate Editor in spring 2025, observing Journal operations. In 2026, the new Editor will assume all duties.

 The peer-reviewed Journal is sponsored by the Voces Oral History Center at the University of Texas at Austin’s Moody College of Communication and published annually by the University of Texas Press. UT Press coordinates editorial production, manufacturing, distribution, and financial management of the Journal—which is self-supporting.

 The Editor would work closely with two managing editors (MEs), paid by Voces. One ME distributes submissions to the reviewers and communicates with authors submitting/resubmitting manuscripts; the other works on the production side, ensuring the quality of the images and accuracy of the captions. The incoming Editor is expected to secure a course release from their respective institution as an incentive. In addition, a modest stipend from Voces will be offered.

 Editor’s duties:

  • Supervise the managing editors to oversee all aspects of Journal operations
  • Provide an initial reading of article submissions to ensure they are appropriate for distribution to blind reviewers
  • Promote the Journal at conferences and other meetings where appropriate
  • Work closely with the University of Texas Press journal production team at the various stages of production
  • Schedule and host an annual Journal Editorial Board teleconference meeting to discuss current submissions and future work
  • Ensure that standing features meet deadlines
  • Write the Editor’s Note to preface each issue
  • Ensure the Journal meets its annual early April submission deadline for fall publication.

 Qualifications:

  • Demonstrated commitment to oral history methodology and/or theory
  • Some record of using oral history in academic writing
  • Demonstrated commitment to research on Latina/o experiences in the U.S.
  • Familiarity with the U.S. Latina & Latino Oral History Journal
  • Must secure institutional support in the form of a course release

 Deadline to apply: Monday, January 6th, 2025.

Please submit the following materials through this Qualtrics link:

  1. A CV
  2. A short statement (no longer than two pages, double-spaced) of why you wish to be the new editor and what you bring to the position 
  3. A written commitment from the candidate’s institution (dean or above) that they will provide at least one course release annually for the duration of the editorship

Contact Information

Jackie Pedota, Ph.D.

The University of Texas at Austin

Managing Editor, US Latina & Latino Oral History Journal (University of Texas Press)

New Issue: Digital Humanities Quarterly, Special Issue: Using Visual AI Applied to Digital Archives

2024 18.2
Special Issue: Using Visual AI Applied to Digital Archives

Front Matter

Introduction to the Special Issue: Using Visual AI Applied to Digital Archives
Lise Jaillant, Loughborough University, UK

Articles

[en] Augmenting Access to Embodied Knowledge Archives: A Computational Framework
Giacomo Alliata, Laboratory for Experimental Museology, EPFL, Switzerland; Yumeng Hou, Laboratory for Experimental Museology, EPFL, Switzerland; Sarah Kenderdine, Laboratory for Experimental Museology, EPFL, Switzerland

[en] Sensitivity and Access: Unlocking the Colonial Visual Archive with Machine Learning
Jonathan Dentler, Catholic University of Paris; German Historical Institute, Washington D.C.; Lise Jaillant, Loughborough University, UK; Daniel Foliard, Université Paris Cité, LARCA (UMR 8225); Julien Schuh, Université Paris Nanterre; Maison des Sciences de l’Homme Mondes

[en] AI and Medical Images: Addressing Ethical Challenges to Provide Responsible Access to Historical Medical Illustrations
Lise Jaillant, Loughborough University, UK; Katherine Aske, Edinburgh Napier University, UK

[en] Capturing Captions: Using AI to Identify and Analyse Image Captions in a Large Dataset of Historical Book Illustrations
Julia Thomas, School of English Communication and Philosophy, Cardiff University; Irene Testini, Special Collections and Archives, Cardiff University

[en] Deep Learning for Historical Cadastral Maps and Satellite Imagery Analysis: Insights from Styria’s Franciscean Cadastre
Wolfgang Thomas Göderle, University of Innsbruck; Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology; Fabian Rampetsreiter, University of Graz; Christian Macher, Know Center; Katrin Mauthner, Know Center; Oliver Pimas, Know Center

Articles

[en] “Open” or “Close” Research Instruments? Conflicting Rationales in the Organization of Early Digital Medieval History in Europe (1960–1990).
Edgar Lejeune, Vossius Center for the History of Humanities and Sciences (University of Amsterdam)

[en] Lilypond Music-Notation Software in the Digital-Humanities Toolbox
Andrew A. Cashner, University of Rochester

[en] LemonizeTBX: Design and Implementation of a New Converter from TBX to OntoLex-Lemon
Andrea Bellandi, Institute for Computational Linguistics “A. Zampolli” CNR, Via Moruzzi 1, 56124, Pisa – Italy; Giorgio Maria Di Nunzio, Department of Information Engineering, University of Padova, Via Gradenigo 6/b, 35131 Padova, Italy; Silvia Piccini, Institute for Computational Linguistics “A. Zampolli” CNR, Via Moruzzi 1, 56124, Pisa – Italy; Federica Vezzani, Department of Linguistic and Literary Studies, University of Padova, Via Elisabetta Vendramini, 13 35137 Padova, Italy

Case Studies

[en] Towards a National Data Architecture for Cultural Collections: Designing the Australian Cultural Data Engine
Rachel Fensham, University of Melbourne; Australian Cultural Data Engine; Tyne Daile Sumner, Australian National University; Australian Cultural Data Engine; Nat Cutter, University of Melbourne; Australian Cultural Data Engine; George Buchanan, RMIT University; Rui Liu, University of Melbourne; Justin Munoz, Independent Scholar; James Smithies, Australian National University; Ivy Zheng, University of Newcastle; David Carlin, RMIT University; Erik Champion, University of South Australia; Hugh Craig, University of Newcastle; Scott East, University of New South Wales; Chris Hay, Flinders University; Lisa M. Given, RMIT University; John Macarthur, University of Queensland; David McMeekin, Curtin University; Joanna Mendelssohn, University of Melbourne; Deborah van der Plaat, University of Queensland

[en] Graph based modelling of prosopographical datasets. Case study: Romans 1by1
Rada Varga, Babeș-Bolyai University; Stefan Bornhofen, CY Cergy Paris University

[en] From Archive to Database: Using Crowdsourcing, TEI, and Collaborative Labor to Construct the Maria Edgeworth Letters Project
Hilary Havens, University of Tennessee, Knoxville; Eliza Alexander Wilcox, University of Tennessee, Knoxville; Meredith L. Hale, University of Tennessee, Knoxville; Jamie Kramer, University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Reviews

[en] A Review of James Little’s The Making of Samuel Beckett’s Not I / Pas moi, That Time / Cette fois and Footfalls / Pas (2021)
Céline Thobois-Gupta, Trinity College Dublin

[en] A Review of Feminist in a Software Lab: Difference + Design (2018)
Diane K. Jakacki, Bucknell University

[en] The Humans and Algorithms of Music Recommendation: A Review of Computing Taste (2022)
Jacob Pleasants, University of Oklahoma

[en] Digital Methods in Literary Criticism: A Review of Digital Humanities and Literary Studies (2022)
Lili Wang, Harbin Engineering University; Tianxiang Chen, Harbin Engineering University

New/Recent Publications

Articles

Micah Altman, Richard Landau. “Selecting Efficient and Reliable Preservation Strategies: Modeling Long-term Information Integrity Using Large-scale Hierarchical Discrete Event Simulation.” International Journal of Digital Curation, Vol. 18 No. 1 (2024)

Jonas Recker, Mari Kleemola, Hervé L’Hours. “Closing Gaps: A Model of Cumulative Curation and Preservation Levels for Trustworthy Digital Repositories.” International Journal of Digital Curation, Vol. 18 No. 1 (2024)

Meyerl, Jordan (2024) “Review of Queer Data Studies,” Journal of Contemporary Archival Studies: Vol. 11, Article 4.

Buchanan, Rose (2024) “Review of War on Record: The Archive and the Afterlife of the Civil War,” Journal of Contemporary Archival Studies: Vol. 11, Article 3.

Shiozaki, R. (2024). People’s perceptions on social media archiving by the National Library of Japan. Journal of Information Science50(4), 861-873. https://doi.org/10.1177/01655515221108692

Fan, Q. (2024), “Research on intangible cultural heritage resource description and knowledge fusion based on linked data”, The Electronic Library, Vol. 42 No. 4, pp. 521-535. https://doi.org/10.1108/EL-01-2023-0018

Chen, H., Kim, J.(A)., Chen, J. and Sakata, A. (2024), “Demystifying oral history with natural language processing and data analytics: a case study of the Densho digital collection”, The Electronic Library, Vol. 42 No. 4, pp. 643-663. https://doi.org/10.1108/EL-12-2023-0303

Books

A Queer Reading of Nawabi Architecture and the Colonial Archive: Lucknow Queerscapes
Sonal Mithal, Arul Paul
Routledge, 2024

Archives and Archiving in the 21st Century
Edited By Radhika Seshan
Routledge, 2024

Archive as Detour: Historical Re-enactment in Artist Archive and Archival Art Practices of Contemporary Hong Kong
Sau Wai Vennes Cheng
Palgrave Macmillan, 2024

Design Thinking in Cultural and Heritage Management: Creating Solutions in the Field of Culture
By Lubomira Trojan, Łukasz Wróblewski
Routledge, 2024

Dissonant Records: Close Listening to Literary Archives
Tanya E Clement
The MIT Press, 2024

Archival Science in Interdisciplinary Theory and Practice
Corinne Rogers and Alexandra Wieland
Rowman & Littlefield

International Perspectives on Museum Management
Edited By Darko Babic
Routledge, 2024

Documentation from Truth and Reconciliation Commissions
Edited By Proscovia Svärd, Bonny Ibhawoh
Routledge, 2024

Queer Obscenity: Erotic Archives in Dictatorial Spain
Javier Fernández-Galeano
Stanford University Press, 2024

The Bloomsbury Handbook of Modernist Archives
Jamie Callison (Anthology Editor) , Matthew Feldman (Anthology Editor) , Anna Svendsen (Anthology Editor) , Erik Tonning (Anthology Editor)

Modern Manuscripts and the Pre-History of Digital Humanities: Paper Processors
Alex Christie
Palgrave Macmillan

Reports

Governance and Business Models for Collaborative Collection Development
Tracy Bergstrom, Oya Y. Rieger, Roger C. Schonfeld

Building a National Finding Aid Network: Final Report
2024
Turner, Adrian; Schiff, Lisa; Mitchell, Catherine; Waibel, Günter

Podcasts

Talking Archives – Episode 9: Julia Minne

The History of Literature Podcast, Lesbians in the Archives (with Amelia Possanza)

Case Studies

TPS Collective
CASE #29: One Class Five Ways by Lauren Kata and Suphan Kirmizialtin
CASE #28: Studying the Physical Book across Collections by Lauren Coats, John David Miles, and Brittany O’Neill
Case #27: Oral Histories as Primary Sources in the Classroom: Examples from the Gordon W. Prange Collection, University of Maryland Libraries by Kana Jenkins
Case #26: Teaching the History of Higher Ed through Primary Sources and Digital Exhibits by Rhia Rae, Molly Castro, and Annia Gonzalez

New Issue: International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives (IASA) Journal

International Association of Sound and Audiovisual Archives (IASA) Journal
Issue 54, 2024
(open access)

Editorial
Jennifer Vaughn

A Letter from IASA’s President
Patrick Midtlyng

Articles

Excavating Wartime Sound Heritage of Germany, Italy, and Japan
Captured Axis Sound Recordings in the Washington, D.C. Area and their Documentation
Carolyn Birdsall, Erica Harrison

The Revolution of Duplicated Music
Sonic Markers to Identify Early Phonograph Cylinder Copies in Archive Collections
Thomas Bårdsen

True Echoes
Researching wax cylinders recorded during the 1898 Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to the Torres Strait Islands
Grace Koch, Rebekah Hayes

CFP: Global Digital Humanities Symposium 2025

Deadline to apply: October 16, 2024
Notifications of acceptance: December 2, 2024
See the full proposal

Digital Humanities (DH) at Michigan State University (MSU) is proud and thrilled to celebrate the 10th Global DH Symposium with a combination of virtual and in-person events over the course of April 2-8, 2025.*

For the past ten years, the Global Digital Humanities Symposium has brought together a diverse range of presenters to spark cross-disciplinary, cross-cultural, and ethically engaged conversations. We will celebrate our decade in this space by reflecting on global digital humanities as a field as well as our impact on this rich area of scholarship. We therefore invite presenters from previous Symposia to return to the conference and share how their work has developed since their presentation.

As we mark this historic anniversary, our commitment to digital humanities scholarship and practice as a key site for interrogating narratives about disruption, connection, identity, resistance, ethics, and accountability continues. In a world shaped by multiple catastrophes and crises, these conversations are as urgent as ever.

We invite work at the intersections of critical DH, that engages with anti-colonial and post-colonial frameworks, that supports feminist and anti-racist praxis, and that crosses political and disciplinary borders. We define the term “humanities” expansively to open up space for a range of issues that encourages interdisciplinary understandings of the humanities.

*The virtual symposium supports presentation and attendance in English and Spanish through live interpretation. The in-person symposium will be in English. We are interested in supporting participation and presentation in additional languages as much as possible within our capacity. Please reach out if you would prefer to submit a proposal or present at the conference in another language. We will do our best to accommodate you.

This Symposium, which will include a mixture of presentation types, welcomes proposals by the end of the day Wednesday, October 16, midnight in your timezone.

This year we especially anticipate and welcome presentations on the following topics:

  • Reflections on the Symposium itself–what has been our effect on the field?
  • Considerations of the “global” in DH
  • Trial, error, process, preservation, and project conclusion as part of DH praxis
  • DH approaches to misinformation, media, and rhetoric in a global election year
  • Labs, support networks, streams/variations, and infrastructure for Global Digital Humanities

We are always interested to hear about the following topics, and their connections to the digital, as reflected in global research conversations and ethical DH practices across disciplines:

  • Public and community-engaged digital humanities in times of crises 
  • Indigeneity, anti-colonialism, and digital cultural heritage
  • Humanist critiques and interventions in artificial intelligence
  • Digital humanities approaches to climate and healthcare
  • Surveillance, censorship, and/or data privacy in a global context 
  • Disability justice and accessibility
  • Open data, open access, and data preservation as resistance
  • Student-centered practices in global digital pedagogy
  • Feminist and queer perspectives in DH
  • Borders, migration, and diasporas with an emphasis on the effects of warfare and conflict 
  • Multilingualism and language justice