Stanford University and the Université de Lille (France) invite submissions for “Digital humanities to Preserve Knowledge and Cultural Heritage: Collaborate, Compute, Share, and Visualize,” a workshop at the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis (CESTA), Stanford University, on Monday, April 15, 2019.
From the call:
As Digital Humanities continue to gain momentum, the field is intersecting with an ever-widening range of disciplines including Natural Language Processing, Library and Information Science, History, Literature, and Translation Studies to name only a few. The growth of these fields within DH enables us to break new scientific ground … This workshop provides an opportunity to present recent scholarship and exchange information about DH projects from all disciplines focused on collecting, computing, sharing and visualizing transnational data to preserve knowledge and cultural heritage.
After the workshop, participants will be invited to revise their papers (incorporating feedback from the workshop) to be considered for inclusion in a special issue of The Journal of Data Mining and Digital Humanities.
One-page abstracts for 15-minute presentations are due by 20 February 2019.
dh+lib Review
This post was produced through a cooperation between Emily Esten, Kristen Totleben, and Lynnsey Weissenberger (Editors-at-large for the week), Pamella Lach (Editor for the week), and Caitlin Christian-Lamb, Nickoal Eichmann-Kalwara, Linsey Ford, and Ian Goodale (dh+lib Review Editors).