Public Group active 2 days, 18 hours ago

Digital Humanities Initiative

The CUNY Digital Humanities Initiative (CUNY DHI), launched in Fall 2010, aims to build connections and community among those at CUNY who are applying digital technologies to scholarship and pedagogy in the humanities. All are welcome: faculty, students, and technologists, experienced practitioners and beginning DHers, enthusiasts and skeptics.

We meet regularly on- and offline to explore key topics in the Digital Humanities, and share our work, questions, and concerns. See our blog for more information on upcoming events (it’s also where we present our group’s work to a wider audience). Help edit the CUNY Digital Humanities Resource Guide, our first group project. And, of course, join the conversation on the Forum.

Photo credit: Digital Hello by hugoslv on sxc.hu.

Admins:

Moderators:

Fwd: [DHSI] CFP: Debates in Digital Humanities 2028

  • ———- Forwarded message ———
    From: Michael Soriano <[email protected]>
    Date: Tue, Apr 8, 2025 at 1:47 PM
    Subject: [DHSI] CFP: Debates in Digital Humanities 2028
    To: <[email protected]>

    Hello,

    Please see below for information on the call for submissions for the next
    general volume of Debates in Digital Humanities. The deadline for abstracts
    is May 25, 2025. We hope you’ll submit and/or share the information with
    interested DHers.

    CFP: Debates in the Digital Humanities 2028
    (https://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/page/cfp-debates-in-the-digital-humanities-2028)

    Kelly Baker Josephs and Lindsay Thomas, Editors

    Deadline for 300-500 word abstracts: May 25, 2025

    Part of the Debates in the Digital Humanities Series
    A book series from the University of Minnesota Press
    Matthew K. Gold and Lauren F. Klein, Series Editors

    Debates in the Digital Humanities (https://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/) seeks to
    publish the best new work in the digital humanities (DH). Possible topics
    for the 2028 volume include but are not limited to:

    State of the field. What are the topics, methods, and other approaches
    that define the digital humanities? How do various sub-fields of DH relate
    to each other? What opportunities and/or challenges remain unaddressed?

    DH and the disciplines. How do (or might) allied fields such as STS,
    design, information science, media studies, computational social science,
    and the history of computing inform or be informed by the debates in the
    digital humanities? How are DH scholars contributing to conversations in
    disciplines traditionally outside of the humanities but that are now
    increasingly interested in “humanities” questions and topics?

    DH and artificial intelligence. How can DHers engage with AI from
    critical, historical, and/or technical perspectives? What is the role of DH
    in building better, more socially responsible, more ethically sound AI
    systems – or in not building them?

    DH pedagogy. How should – or shouldn’t – the digital humanities be
    taught? What role does DH have to play in various curricula and
    disciplines? What does DH look like at different educational levels and
    institutional types?

    DH and the academy. What is the role of DH in a moment defined by
    threats to academic freedom and other foundational values of higher
    education? How can DHers help to imagine and bring about a more just and
    equitable vision for higher education? How is DH practiced (or how should
    it be) when focused on publics outside the academy?

    DH in the present geopolitical moment. What is the role of the field in
    combating the racism, sexism, xenophobia, and other injustices promoted by
    nationalist political movements around the globe?

    DH and labor. Who does (and who is allowed to do) the work of DH? How
    does the inherently collaborative nature of DH help us to imagine work
    differently in, and between, a range of academic, cultural, and other
    organizations?

    DH and the world. What are the issues involved in the continued
    Anglocentrism of the field, as well as its focus on the Global North? What
    does DH look like in other locales?

    The institutionalization of DH. What is the role of DH in this moment of
    institutional instability? How do DHers maintain and support their work and
    the work of others alongside or outside of institutions? What does DH look
    like when focused on civic advocacy and action? What other formations are
    possible or already in place?

    Infrastructures of DH. How do uneven distributions of resources – on
    national, institutional, organizational, and cultural levels – impact and
    shape the field? What are the resources that make DH successful?

    In addressing these and other debates, submissions should take an
    argumentative stance, advocating clearly and explicitly from a particular
    point of view. DDH does not publish case studies. Scholars and
    practitioners from across the disciplines (regardless of rank, position, or
    institutional affiliation) are invited to submit abstracts (300-500 words)
    on these or other topics by May 25, 2025, to Kelly Baker Josephs (
    [email protected]) and Lindsay Thomas ([email protected]).
    Collaboratively authored submissions are welcome.

    The Debates in the Digital Humanities editorial team will review all
    abstracts, and authors of selected abstracts will be invited to submit full
    essays by October 1, 2025. The team will consult with the authors of
    selected abstracts about the length of their contributions, which will
    range from 2000 to 5000 words.

    We also welcome nominations of blog posts or other short-form pieces that
    address the above and related issues.

    As the series aims to introduce fully conceived scholarship on issues of
    pressing importance to the field, this volume will operate on a compressed
    production schedule. Contributors will be expected to participate in
    peer-to-peer and editorial review in October 2025; revised essays will be
    due in early Spring 2026. The volume will be published in print and online
    in an open-access edition through the Manifold platform by 2028.

    Debates in the Digital Humanities is a hybrid print/digital publication
    stream that explores new debates in the field as they emerge. The most
    recent book in this series is Digital Futures of Graduate Study in the
    Humanities
    (https://dhdebates.gc.cuny.edu/projects/digital-futures-of-graduate-study-in-the-humanities)
    .

    *Michael Soriano* he/him/his
    PhD Candidate, English | University of Miami
    Editor, *Radical Periodical Index* (http://radicalperiodicalindex.com)
    UGrow Fellow, Digital Humanities
    Department Representative, English Graduate Organization (EGO)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.