CFP: Digital Technology

“Built Upon” – CFP for projects using digital archives and collections
full name / name of organization:
Anvil Academic
contact email:
[email protected]
In keeping with our mission to foster innovative digital scholarship, Anvil Academic invites submissions to its inaugural publication series: Built Upon. The Built Upon series encourages authors to investigate and invigorate pre-existing digital tools and collections in developing their own scholarly arguments or pedagogical projects.

What we’re looking for
We’re looking for proposals that advance discussions about what information-age analysis in the humanities should be and do. This doesn’t mean that we’re resistant to text-centric arguments, or that we’re simply uncritical boosters of any use of digital tools or algorithmic methods for analysis. What it does mean is that submissions should productively combine good argument with critical tool use.

Submissions can range from more traditional article-length essays to enhanced multimedia presentations. Overall, our main focus is work–in whatever form–that is imaginative and innovative in its approach to the possibilities of digital publication. Such innovation can take place at the level of either form or content (or both). For instance, a project might answer pressing questions about how specific digital tools (say topic models or network visualizations) inform critical inquiry writ large. Or they might deploy such tools to contribute pioneering responses to core, field-specific discussions, or explore new approaches to scholarly arguments that take advantage of the affordances of digital publication. We want the Built Upon series to be an incubator and an accelerator of humanities innovation–a space where the craft, artistry, and objective rigor of humanistic pursuits find new and surprising modes of expression.

Key themes and partners
We have identified three broad themes for Built Upon and have commitments to participate from leading digital archives and web-based tools within these clusters:

Civil War America: partners include Visualizing Emancipation, Valley of the Shadow, and the University of Florida Digital Collections’ Florida and the Civil War
19th-Century Studies: partners include many of the NINES federated projects, and the University of Florida Digital Collections’ The Parkman Dexter Howe Library and Baldwin Library of Historical Children’s Literature
Classical Studies: partners include Perseus, ORBIS, and Homer Multitext
We’ll be announcing additional partnerships and themes soon!

Working with partners
Contributors should build upon one or more participating digital collections. Of course, they may also make use of other digital collections as well.

The Built Upon partner archives are freely available to scholars. We are inviting partner archives to take part in the peer review process, evaluating scholars’ work overall and, in particular, the use to which they have put the archive’s materials. We further encourage partners to provide limited technical assistance to authors. Finally, we hope that partners will support outreach and promotion efforts by bringing attention to relevant works published in the Built Upon series. For more information, please see our call for participating archives.

Submission guidelines
Since we aim to expand the possibilities of digital scholarship, we are open to any work that advances both traditional and digital scholarship and breaks new ground in its use of digital collections. We expect that authors will make their own work open to commentary and discussion and respond to other projects in the cluster.

In your 500-1000 word proposal, please address:

a description of the project’s argument and scholarly significance
digital collections/ tools you intend to use (and how you would like to use them)
anticipated audience
potential technical approaches
When evaluating submissions, reviewers will be looking for projects that:

define and develop emerging conversations within a field
offer a creative and critical contribution to the field, taking advantage of the capabilities of digital technologies to, for example, embed media, foster interactivity, facilitate commentary and conversation, enable readers to query and explore supporting evidence, and/or construct new structures for argumentation
advance interdisciplinary approaches and/or methodologies
employ innovative formats and appropriate technology
are feasible and sustainable
Please submit your proposal and CV(s) via email to Fred Moody, Anvil editor, at [email protected].

See our FAQ for more information about the Built Upon series.

Anticipated timeline

January 22, 2013: 500-1000 word proposal due
February 4, 2013: Review of proposals completed and authors notified of status of their proposals
April 8, 2013: Completed draft project due
More information
For more information about Built Upon, please contact Fred Moody at [email protected].

from UPenn cfp website

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