CFP 23 June special issue journal of archaeological method and theory: The Connected Past

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Tom Brughmans

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Jun 17, 2013, 8:41:25 AM6/17/13
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Apologies for cross-posting

Hi all,

This is a quick reminder of the 23rd June deadline for extended abstracts for The Connected Past special issue of the Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. The call for submissions to this special issue is now open. So don’t hesitate any longer and send us that awesome networky paper you have been working on! As you can gather from the CFP below, we want to have a focused special issue with solid case studies that illustrate how network analysis can be useful in archaeology. However, we are really keen to publish really innovative approaches, things that have not been tried before by archaeological network analysts. We look forward to reading your abstracts!

Looking forward to hearing from you,

Tom, Anna, Fiona, Barbara

 ----

CALL FOR PAPERS

The Connected Past: critical and innovative approaches to networks in archaeology

A special issue of Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory

Edited by: Anna Collar, Tom Brughmans, Fiona Coward and Barbara Mills

Over the last decade the number of published archaeological applications of network methods and theories has increased significantly. A number of research themes deserve further exploration, however. How do particular archaeological research contexts drive the selection and adaptation of formal network methods from the wide range of existing approaches? What is the role archaeological data can play in network methods? What are the decisions we are faced with when defining nodes and ties, and what assumptions underlie these definitions? How can our theoretical approaches be expressed through formal methods incorporating empirical data? Are network theories and methods compatible? How can materiality be incorporated within existing network approaches? How can we deal with long-term network evolution within archaeological research contexts?
This special issue aims to illustrate through innovative and critical archaeological case studies that these problems can be overcome, and that by doing so the role of archaeological network analysis within the archaeologist’s toolbox will become better defined.

This special issue invites well-developed archaeological case studies in which a network-based method is formulated as the best approach to an archaeological research question. A key conviction of this special issue is that theoretical and methodological concerns should be raised through practice. As such, papers are expected to either develop a critical and detailed archaeological analysis through commonly applied network-based approaches, or to illustrate how archaeological research contexts can require the development or adoption of innovative network techniques. Such a collection of case studies will illustrate that the network is not an end-product; it is a research perspective that allows one to ask and answer unique questions of archaeological relevance.

Please send extended abstracts (1000 words) to connec...@soton.ac.uk by 23 June 2013.

Notification of acceptance: July 2013.
Submission of full papers for peer-review to guest editors: 22 September 2013.
Submission of revised papers for peer-review to JAMT: 24 November 2013.

Please note that the acceptance of extended abstracts and peer-review by guest editors is not a guarantee that the paper will be published in the special issue. Individual papers will have to successfully go through the JAMT peer-review process before publication can be guaranteed.

geoff carver

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Jun 17, 2013, 8:52:57 AM6/17/13
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So… something on the method & theory of datamining?

Tom Brughmans

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Jun 17, 2013, 11:11:25 AM6/17/13
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Hi Geoff and all,
 
The special issue aims to publish archaeological case studies where the use of network methods or theories has provided new archaeological insights, or allowed the formulation of new archaeological research questions. A discussion of methods and theory should therefore always be in light of the case study presented. A paper on datamining is welcome if it explicitly uses network techniques or a networks research perspective. More info on the special issue can be found online: http://connectedpast.soton.ac.uk/publications/
 
All the best,
 
Tom
 
Archaeological Computing Research Group
University of Southampton

From: geoff carver <gjca...@t-online.de>
To: anti...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Monday, June 17, 2013 1:52 PM
Subject: RE: [Antiquist] CFP 23 June special issue journal of archaeological method and theory: The Connected Past

So… something on the method & theory of datamining?
 
From: anti...@googlegroups.com [mailto:anti...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Tom Brughmans

 
This is a quick reminder of the 23rd June deadline for extended abstracts for The Connected Past special issue of the Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. The call for submissions to this special issue is now open. So don’t hesitate any longer and send us that awesome networky paper you have been working on! As you can gather from the CFP below, we want to have a focused special issue with solid case studies that illustrate how network analysis can be useful in archaeology. However, we are really keen to publish really innovative approaches, things that have not been tried before by archaeological network analysts. We look forward to reading your abstracts!
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