The Journal of Critical Digital Librarianship, an open-access and open peer review journal, invites submissions focused on “feminist, anti-racist, anti-colonial, queer, and/or anti-ableist perspectives on digital librarianship.” From the call for submissions:
We accept article manuscripts, literature reviews, and reviews of digital collections, as well as relevant multimedia explorations such as podcast episodes, information visualizations, and other creative formats. If you have an idea for thoughtful scholarship, we would love to hear about it. We are interested in critical approaches to:
- Selection for digitization
- Metadata remediation
- Digital scholarship
- Collections as data
- Teaching with digital collections
- Digital library technology
We publish work on an ongoing basis and assign them to that year’s issue. If accepted, your work will be published as soon as it has completed the review process, and it will be officially wrapped into the next closing issue. We ask that submitted articles not exceed 7,000 words and reviews not exceed 5,000 words. The JCDL uses Chicago Manual of Style, Notes and Bibliography.
If you are interested in submitting your work to JCDL, please view our submission guidelines.
Submissions are accepted on a rolling basis. Submitted articles not exceed 7,000 words and reviews should not exceed 5,000 words.
dh+lib Review
This post was produced through a cooperation between Abbie Norris-Davidson, Michelle Speed, and Mark Szarko (Editors-at-Large), Pamella Lach and Christine Salek (Editors for the week), Claudia Berger, Ruth Carpenter, Caitlin Christian-Lamb, Nickoal Eichmann-Kalwara, Linsey Ford, Molly McGuire, Hillary Richardson, and Rachel Starry (dh+lib Review Editors), and Tom Lee (Technical Editor).