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Humanist Archives: April 10, 2019, 6:02 a.m. Humanist 32.605 - events: provenance of data cfp; threats to & opportunities for access

                  Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 32, No. 605.
            Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London
                   Hosted by King's Digital Lab
                       www.dhhumanist.org
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    [1]    From: Kalliopi Zervanou 
           Subject: CFP :: Materia on the Move: Trade & Colonisation of Collections - Digital Studies in Provenance (141)

    [2]    From: Mahony, Simon 
           Subject: Charlotte Roueché: Wider Horizons, Harder Borders or Whose data are they, anyway? (42)


--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Date: 2019-04-09 13:15:24+00:00
        From: Kalliopi Zervanou 
        Subject: CFP :: Materia on the Move: Trade & Colonisation of Collections - Digital Studies in Provenance

Second Call for Papers

Materia on the Move:
Trade & Colonisation of Collections - Digital Studies in Provenance
Utrecht, July 8 2019

https://sites.google.com/view/materia-on-the-move-2019/home

Submission deadline: May 5, 2019
********************************************************************

The workshop  will be held in conjunction with the 2019 Digital Humanities
conference (DH2019), the annual international conference of the Alliance of
Digital Humanities Organizations which will take place in July 9-12,  2019, in
Utrecht, The Netherlands.

This workshop aims to bring together researchers from various humanities
disciplines, such as history, ethnography and archaeology, with the established
guardians of collections, namely researchers in archival, library, museum
studies and information science professionals and stakeholders to present and
discuss approaches in tracing and documenting provenance, be it geographical or
cultural and ideological.

==================
Scope and Topic
==================
The transfer of ideas, knowledge and culture is linked with the transfer and
interpretation of objects, be it art objects, tools or natural specimens, such
as plants, minerals, and animals. These objects have been removed from their
natural cultural and environmental context into collections. Being mediums of
knowledge transfer and evolution, objects move in both space and time. In time,
as objects are relocated and re-studied, new interpretations of the objects and
relations between them are formed in accordance to scientific and political,
ethical and societal developments. In space, they move along trade networks and
are discussed in communication networks.

Currently, digitised cultural heritage data, such as art collections, letters,
digitised manuscripts, archival material, and natural history specimens, present
an unprecedented opportunity for humanities researchers investigating various
aspects of such object trajectories:

- by connecting and integrating disparate data sources to re-contextualise lost
historical and cultural contexts;

- by extraction of information from historical and modern document sources;

- by developing metadata that capture the evolution of knowledge and the
information content of available digitised sources;

- by developing algorithms for combining available information

Topics of interest include:

* Use of linked data for data integration
* Approaches to metadata and knowledge resource development
* Historical information modelling
* Use of geographical information & historical location resolution
* Processing of textual sources for information related to transferred objects
* Tracing knowledge through scientific and/or commercial networks

==================
Information for authors
==================
Authors are invited to submit papers on original, unpublished work in the topic
area of the workshop, related use cases, or system demos.
Long papers should present completed work and may consist of up to eight (8)
pages of content, and any number of additional pages containing references only.
Final versions of long papers will be given one additional page of content (up
to 9 pages), so that reviewers' comments can be taken into account.

Short papers/demos can present work in progress, an application, or the
description of a system, and may consist of up to six (6) pages of content, and
any number of additional pages containing references only. Final versions of
long papers will be given one additional page of content (up to 7 pages), so
that reviewers' comments can be taken into account.

All submissions should be formatted using the stylesheets provided for the
workshop:
https://sites.google.com/view/materia-on-the-move-2019/information-for-authors

The reviewing process will be double-blind; the papers should not include the
authors' names and affiliations, or any references to web sites, project names,
etc., revealing the authors' identity. Furthermore, self-references that reveal
the author's identity, should be avoided. Authors should not use anonymous
citations and should not include any acknowledgments. Double submission is
acceptable, but authors will be asked to declare it at the time of submission.

Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings and submitted to
CEUR-WS.org for online publication.

Papers should be submitted electronically, in PDF format, at the workshop
submission website:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=materiaonthemove2019

==================
Important Dates
==================
Paper submission deadline:  May 5, 2019
Notification of acceptance:    May 24, 2019
Camera-ready papers due:    June 2, 2019
Workshop date:  July 8, 2019

==================
Programme Committee
==================
Tinde van Andel, Naturalis Biodiversity Center, The Netherlands
Gudrun Bucher, SUB Göttingen, Germany
Thierry Declerck, DFKI GmbH, Germany
Katherine McDonough, The Alan Turing Institute, UK
Rik Feiken, Cultural Heritage Agency – RCE, The Netherlands
Maarten Heerlien, Rijksmuseum, The Netherlands
Inge van der Jagt, Cultural Heritage Agency – RCE, The Netherlands
Wouter Klein, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Martijn Kleppe, National Library - KB, The Netherlands
Marijn Koolen, Huygens ING, The Netherlands
Piroska Lendvai, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Germany
Ioanna Lykourentzou, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Julianne Nyhan, University College London, UK
Petya Osenova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Michael Piotrowski, Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Marijn Schraagen, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Kiril Simov, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Caroline  Sporleder, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Germany
Andreas Vlachidis, University College London, UK
Lianne Wilmink, Cultural Heritage Agency – RCE, The Netherlands

================
Organisation
================
Kalliopi A. Zervanou, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands
Toine Pieters, Utrecht University, The Netherlands

Contact: k.zervanou(at)tue.nl

--------------------------------------------------------------
Kalliopi A. Zervanou
Lecturer - Industrial Engineering & Innovation Sciences
Eindhoven University of Technology

https://www.tue.nl/en/research/researchers/kalliopi-zervanou/


--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Date: 2019-04-09 11:08:09+00:00
        From: Mahony, Simon 
        Subject: Charlotte Roueché: Wider Horizons, Harder Borders or Whose data are they, anyway?

We are delighted to announce that Charlotte Roueché will be giving the
annual UCLDH Susan Hockey Lecture in Digital Humanities.

Wider Horizons, Harder Borders or Whose data are they, anyway?
18:00 21 May 2019
UCL Institute of Archaeology

Over the last 20 years Charlotte Roueché has worked to publish rich
accounts of ancient materials online. Over the same period, while
connectivity has expanded enormously, one response has been to build
more walls and enclosures, both for people and for data. Research is
increasingly assessed for its utilitarian value, which is measured by
the Research Question, rather than by its power to enable the work of
others.

In this, the fifth lecture in the annual UCLDH Susan Hockey Lecture
series (http://www.ucl.ac.uk/dh/events/SusanHockeyLecture), she will
review progress and change in digital humanities, and try to disentangle
the threats from the opportunities.

Please note this lecture will be filmed. The lecture will be followed by
a drinks reception. All welcome but please register to attend.

This event is organised by UCL Centre for Digital Humanities
(https://www.ucl.ac.uk/dh), part of the UCL Institute of Advanced
Studies (https://www.ucl.ac.uk/institute-of-advanced-studies/).

All detail and registration at:
(https://www.ucl.ac.uk/digital-humanities/events/2019/may/wider-horizons-harder-
borders-or-whose-data-are-they-anyway)


--
Simon Mahony
Principal Teaching Fellow
Director, UCL Centre for Digital Humanities
Department of Information Studies
University College London
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/information-studies/simon-mahony





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