Fwd: [SIGCIS-Members] CFP: "Born Digital Cultural Histories" special issue, _Arts_

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Jessica Meyerson

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Aug 7, 2018, 11:53:03 AM8/7/18
to Software Preservation Network
Of possible interest - and plenty of time with an October deadline!

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Melanie Swalwell <melanie....@flinders.edu.au>
Date: Tue, Aug 7, 2018 at 12:48 AM
Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] CFP: "Born Digital Cultural Histories" special issue, _Arts_
To: Melanie Swalwell <melanie....@flinders.edu.au>


Dear colleagues,

 

I am writing to draw your attention to a CFP for an upcoming special issue of the journal Arts I am guest editing, themed around “Born Digital Cultural Histories”. The call is pasted below, and is online at http://www.mdpi.com/journal/arts/special_issues/born_digital_cultural_histories

 

Arts is an open access, online journal, and article processing fees are waived. There is no word count, and images are most welcome and will be in colour, which is welcome news if you have something visually rich to publish.

 

Full instructions for authors are at http://www.mdpi.com/journal/arts/instructions

 

The deadline is the end of October.

 

If the CFP might be of interest to people you know, I would be grateful if you’d bring it to their attention. Potential authors are very welcome to contact me with their ideas.

 

Regards,

 

Melanie

 

Whilst many artefacts today are produced, distributed and consumed solely in digital form, this situation is not completely new. Artefacts from previous eras have also been ‘born’ digital. The advent of micro- or home computers in the mid-1970s and 1980s, for instance, saw a range of digital artefacts produced, amongst them digital games, demos, a range of experimental art, and other early software. These objects are complex and interesting as are the preservation challenges they pose. While issues of hardware and software deterioration are arguably becoming better understood, the earliness with which decisions about significance and preservation strategies must be arrived at marks these artefacts out as different from other forms of cultural heritage.

Paper might address topics including, but not limited to:

  • Continuities and discontinuities between contemporary and historical digital culture
  • Histories of the digital everyday
  • Artists as archivists
  • Institutional responses to digital cultural heritage
  • Changing notions of the collection
  • Jurisdictions, overlaps, gaps
  • Resourcing, funding, partnerships
  • Relation of born digital preservation to digitisation programs
  • Permanence and entropy
  • Inter-agency cooperation, federations and networks
  • Models of collaboration, outside experts, volunteers
  • Access and exhibition
  • Legal issues, intellectual property, orphaned works, legal deposit
  • Workforce, capacity building, training
  • New preservation and conservation techniques
  • Case studies, including: architecture, broadcasting, apps, mobile and multiplayer games, demoscenes, net and media art
  • Preserving algorithmic culture

Proposals might be theoretical, applied, policy, or otherwise oriented. Case studies of innovative practices, papers based on research with born digital artefacts, and new institutional approaches are equally welcome.

Articles must be original, not under consideration elsewhere, and should make new contributions to knowledge.

All articles in the issue will undergo double blind peer review.

 

--

Assoc. Prof. Melanie Swalwell

 

College of Humanities, Arts & Social Sciences

Flinders University

GPO Box 2100

Adelaide SA 5001

 

Ph: +61 8 8201 2619

278 Humanities Bldg

www.flinders.edu.au

http://www.flinders.edu.au/people/melanie.swalwell

@melswal

 

CFPs: “Born Digital Cultural Histories” & Crafting, Hacking, and Making: DIY Pasts, Presents, and Futures

Fans and Videogames: Histories, fandom, archives

Researching Creative Micro-computing in Australia

Popular Memory Archive

Play It Again blog

Australasian Digital Heritage

Digital Heritage blog

 

CRICOS Provider: 00114A

This email and any attachments may be confidential. If you are not the intended recipient, please inform the sender by reply email and delete all copies of this message.

 

 


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