21.309 new on WWW: Vectors; Digital Arts & Humanities; EMLS

From: Humanist Discussion Group (by way of Willard McCarty willard.mccarty_at_kcl.ac.uk>
Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 06:29:01 +0100

               Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 21, No. 309.
       Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
  www.kcl.ac.uk/schools/humanities/cch/research/publications/humanist.html
                        www.princeton.edu/humanist/
                     Submit to: humanist_at_princeton.edu

   [1] From: "Borovsky, Zoe" <zoe_at_ats.ucla.edu> (28)
         Subject: Fifth Issue of Vectors is now online

   [2] From: Methnet <methnet_at_KCL.AC.UK> (65)
         Subject: New on Digital Arts & Humanities

   [3] From: Sean and Karine Lawrence (51)
                 <seanlawrence_at_writeme.com>
         Subject: EMLS Special issues

--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 08:00:48 +0100
         From: "Borovsky, Zoe" <zoe_at_ats.ucla.edu>
         Subject: Fifth Issue of Vectors is now online

From: Vectors Journal [noreply_at_ws182.annenberg.edu]
Sent: 10/16/2007 11:21 AM MST
To: Cathy Davidson

Vectors: Journal of Culture and Technology in a Dynamic Vernacular is
pleased to announce the launch of its new issue devoted to the theme of
Difference: http://www.vectorsjournal.org

Our fifth issue of Vectors stages multiple examinations of the notion
of difference as it plays out in a variety of spheres, discourses and
practices, while also privileging race and ethnicity as a central
through-line of digital culture, a recurring ghost in our networked
machines.. Featured scholars include David Theo Goldberg/Stefka
Hristova, Wendy Chun, Mark Kann, Jon Ippolito, Minoo Moallem,
Jennifer Terry and Christian Sandvig. Vectors is produced by editors
Tara McPherson and Steve Anderson, co-creative directors Erik Loyer
and Raegan Kelly, and programmer Craig Dietrich with additional
design by Alex Ceglia.

Vectors is an international peer-reviewed electronic journal
dedicated to expanding the potentials of academic publication via
emergent and transitional media. Vectors brings together visionary
scholars with cutting-edge designers and technologists to propose a
thorough rethinking of the dynamic relationship of form to content in
academic research, focusing on the ways technology shapes, transforms
and reconfigures social and cultural relations. We only publish
works that exceed the boundaries of print.

Please also explore previous issues in the Vectors Archive and
contribute to an ongoing dialogue with the project creators via the
Vectors Forums.

Feel free to share this announcement widely.

--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 08:03:05 +0100
         From: Methnet <methnet_at_KCL.AC.UK>
         Subject: New on Digital Arts & Humanities

Digital Arts & Humanities is a place to share and discuss ideas,
promote your research and discover the digital arts and humanities.

It is a virtual (meta)community for arts and humanities researchers
using ICT methods, developed by the AHRC ICT Methods Network and
hosted by King's College London. We host various discussion groups
and offer community and dissemination tools for practitioners working
in the field. Part of Digital Arts & Humanities is a match-making
service for registered users that allows you to search members'
profiles for common interests or needed skills - we currently have
over 300 profiles in the database.

http://www.arts-humanities.net/

You can contribute to all the ongoing discussions, engage with others
- and maybe even start your own group. Please contact Torsten Reimer
(torsten.reimer_at_kcl.ac.uk) for further questions.

FEATURED CONTENT

ICT Events Calendar

The ICT Events Calendar lists conferences, workshops and other events
related to information and communication technology in research. You
can subscribe to its RSS feed or directly import all events into your
calendar via its ical function. The subscription module of Digital
Arts & Humanities allows you to receive automatic announcements of
new events - and as a registered user you can announce your own
activities and tag them to make them visible for others:

http://www.arts-humanities.net/event

NEW USER GROUPS

Archaeology and 3D technology
http://www.arts-humanities.net/archaeology_3d_technology
A special interest group for archaeologists and heritage
professionals working with 3-dimensional data and spatial analysis
technologies

Intimacy: Across Digital and Visceral Performance
http://www.arts-humanities.net/ intimacy_across_digital_visceral_performance
Explorations of intimate encounters in performance practice, bridging
across digital performance and live art

The Digital Body
http://www.arts-humanities.net/digital_body
Discussions on virtual, mixed and augmented realities and their
relation to the body

Wmatrix
http://www.arts-humanities.net/wmatrix
A user group for the Wmatrix corpus analysis and comparison tool

NEW DISCUSSIONS

After the AHDS: The End of National Support?
http://www.arts-humanities.net/forum/after_ahds_end_national_support

Interview: Paul Rayson Wmatrix, text mining
http://www.arts-humanities.net/wmatrix/forum/
interview_paul_rayson_wmatrix_text_mining

Web Portals and the Historic Environment
http://www.arts-humanities.net/forum/web_portals_historic_environment

DIGITAL ARTS AND HUMANITIES WIKI

The wiki now contains some 70 articles on tools and methods in the
digital arts and humanities, from "Access Grid for Art Historians" to
"XML and Related Methods in Archaeology". You can amend the
information contained here and also create new articles:

http://www.arts-humanities.net/wiki

AUDIO AND VIDEO CONTENT NOW ONLINE

Audio recordings of presentations and podcasts, dealing with issues
such as text mining or spatial technologies in archaeology. Listen to
a case study on virtual restoration and manuscript archaeology:
http://www.arts-humanities.net/audio

Video: This new section gives you access to video recordings of
presentations given at Methods Network events. Watch the panel
"Talking CGI" given at the Art of British CGI conference earlier this
year:
http://www.arts-humanities.net/video

--[3]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 08:01:54 +0100
         From: Sean and Karine Lawrence <seanlawrence_at_writeme.com>
         Subject: EMLS Special issues

EMLS is pleased to announce a double launch of two guest-edited Special Issues:

Court culture 1642-1660, EMLS Special Issue 15 (September, 2007)
edited by Jerome de Groot and Peter Sillitoe.

The Long 1590s, EMLS 13.2/Special Issue 16 (September, 2007) edited
by Lisa Hopkins and Annaliese Connolly.

As usual, both collections are available for download free-to-air and
without subscription from http://purl.org/emls.

The contents are as follows:

Court Culture

* Introduction: Court culture in the 1640s and 1650s. [1] Jerome de
Groot (University of Manchester) and Peter Sillitoe (University of Sheffield).
* 'Hot and eager in courtship': representations of court life in the
parliamentarian press, 1642-9. [2] Jason Peacey (University College London).
* The Hague Courts of Elizabeth of Bohemia and Mary Stuart:
Theatrical and Ceremonial Cultures. [3] Julie Sanders (University of
Nottingham) and Ann Hughes (Keele University).
* 'Tyer'd in her Banish'd dress': Henrietta Maria in exile. [4] Karen
Britland (Keele University).
* 'Long, dangerous and expensive journeys': the grooms of the
bedchamber at Charles II's court in exile. [5] Geoffrey Smith
(University of Melbourne).
* Actors and the Court after 1642. [6] John Astington (University of Toronto).
* 'Soveraigne Receipts' and the Politics of Beauty in The Queens
Closet Opened. [7] Edith Snook (University of New Brunswick).

The Long 1590s

* Foreword. [1] Annaliese Connolly and Lisa Hopkins (Sheffield Hallam
University).
* 'These latter days of the world': the Correspondence of Elizabeth I
and James VI, 1590-1603. [2] Rayne Allinson, (Magdalen College, Oxford).
* 'To Love and Be Wise': the Earl of Essex, Humanist Court Culture,
and England's Learned Queen. [3] Linda Shenk (Iowa State University).
* 'The representing of so strange a power in love': Philip Sidney's
Legacy of Anti-factionalism. [4] Richard Wood (Sheffield Hallam University).
* 'Et in Arcadia Ego': The Politics of Pirates in the Old Arcadia,
New Arcadia and Urania. [5] Claire Jowitt (Nottingham Trent University).
* 'You serued God he set you free': Self, Nation, and Celebration in
the Wager-Voyaging Adventure of Richard Ferris. [6] Michael Manous
(University of California, Riverside).
* 'Resolve me of all ambiguities': Doctor Faustus and the Failure to
Unify. [7] Andy Duxfield (Sheffield Hallam University).
* '[I]ygging vaines' and 'riming mother wits': Marlowe, Clowns and
the Early Frameworks of Dramatic Authorship. [8] Kirk Melnikoff
(University of University of North Carolina at Charlotte).
* Peele's David and Bethsabe: Reconsidering Biblical Drama of the
Long 1590s. [9] Annaliese Connolly (Sheffield Hallam University).
* The ' Turk Phenomenon' and the Repertory of the Late Elizabethan
Playhouse. [10] Mark Hutchings (University of Reading).
* To Sodomize a Nation: Edward II, Ireland, and the Threat of
Penetration. [11] Marcie Bianco (Rutgers University).
* Shakespeare and the Invention of the Heterosexual. [12] Stephen
Guy-Bray (University of British Columbia).
Received on Tue Oct 23 2007 - 01:57:40 EDT

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