[Antiquitas] Open CFP: Digital Approaches and the Ancient World

Katariina Mustakallio Katariina.Mustakallio at staff.uta.fi
Ti Nov 17 09:25:21 EET 2015




With apologies for crossposting. Please circulate as widely as possible.

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*Digital Approaches and the Ancient World* A themed issue of the _Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies_



Editors:

Gabriel Bodard (University of London) gabriel.bodard at sas.ac.uk<mailto:gabriel.bodard at sas.ac.uk> Yanne Broux (KU Leuven) yanne.broux at arts.kuleuven.be<mailto:yanne.broux at arts.kuleuven.be> Ségolène Tarte (University of Oxford) segolene.tarte at oerc.ox.ac.uk<mailto:segolene.tarte at oerc.ox.ac.uk>



Call for papers:

We invite colleagues all around the world and at all stages of their careers to submit papers on the topic of “Digital Approaches and the Ancient World” to a themed issue of the Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. The topic is to be construed as widely as possible, to include not only the history, archaeology, language, literature and thought of the ancient and late antique Mediterranean world, but also of antiquity more widely, potentially including, for example, South and East Asian, Sub-Saharan African or Pre-Columbian American history.

Digital approaches may also vary widely, to include methodologies from the digital humanities and information studies, quantitative methods from the hard sciences, or other innovative and transdisciplinary themes.



Papers will be fully peer reviewed and selected for inclusion based not only on their research quality and significance, but especially on their ability to engage profoundly both with classics/history academic readers, and scholars from digital or informatic disciplines. We are keen to see papers that clearly lay out their disciplinary and interdisciplinary methodological approaches, and present and interpret the full range of scholarly and practical outcomes of their research.



We encourage the use of and direct reference to open online datasets in your papers. BICS is not currently an open access publication, but self-archiving of pre-press papers is permitted, and the editors believe in the transparency and accountability that comes with basing scientific work on open data.



To submit an article to this themed issue, please send your full paper of 4,000–8,000 words in Microsoft Word doc, docx or rtf format, to <gabriel.bodard at sas.ac.uk<mailto:gabriel.bodard at sas.ac.uk>>, along with a 150 word abstract, by January 31, 2016. You do not need to follow BICS style for the initial submission, but please note that the final version of accepted articles will need to be formatted to adhere to our style guide (http://www.icls.sas.ac.uk/sites/default/files/files/STYLE-V15.pdf).



If you have any questions about this issue, please feel free to contact any of the editors informally.





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Dr Gabriel BODARD

Reader in Digital Classics



Institute of Classical Studies

University of London

Senate House

Malet Street

London WC1E 7HU



E: Gabriel.bodard at sas.ac.uk<mailto:Gabriel.bodard at sas.ac.uk>

T: +44 (0)20 78628752



http://digitalclassicist.org/

Archive of list messages may be found at: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/classicsgrads Visit the same site to change your subscription settings. All queries regarding the list should be addressed to the list-owner: jonathan.prag at merton.ox.ac.uk<mailto:jonathan.prag at merton.ox.ac.uk>
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