humanities computing and the internet

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CFP: Media, Culture, and Technology (e-journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, March 21, 2000 - 6:12pm
Andreas Kitzmann

http://www.kk.kau.se/mct/start.html

This is a call for papers for the 4th Issue of M/C/T a journal/e-zine
concerned with Media, Culture and Technology. For this issue, we have the
following special theme:

The Fake Issue

What's real? What's true? These may seem like outdated questions in these
hyper wired times of ours. Indeed, as Jean Baudrillard pointed out years
ago, the question of authenticity no longer matters in the same way, now
that we are fully immersed in an environment of virtual simulation. The
quest for authenticity is not only pointless but dissatisfying as well.

CFP: Gender & Tech. in SF Film (no date; journal)

updated: 
Monday, January 10, 2000 - 10:48pm
Ritch Calvin

FEMSPEC, an interdisciplinary feminist journal dedicated to critical
and creative works in the realms of science fiction, fantasy, magical
realism, surrealism, myth, folklore and other supernatural genres, is
planning a special issue on gender and technology in science fiction
film. Possible topics, though not limited to these, include:
      *technology and the cultural construction of feminine/masculine roles
      *the technologically produced body
      *technology as a system of representation
      *technology and the construction of social categories of
difference, such as race, gender, sexuality, and class
      *forms of resistance within/through/despite technology
      *cybersexuality

UPDATE: Media, Culture, and Technology (e-journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, September 21, 1999 - 6:32pm
Andreas Kitzmann

http://www.kk.kau.se/mct/start.html

        This is a call for papers for the January Issue of M/C/T a
journal/e-zine concerned with Media, Culture and Technology. M/C/T is a new
journal for a new medium for a new millenium.

      M/C/T encourages writing that challenges given assumptions about the
information society. We seek to analyse, critique, probe and raise
questions about the intersecting vectors of media, culture and technology.
We invite our readers to join in the conversation and write for M/C/T. We
encourage open hypertexts/ cybertexts.

UPDATE: Women Writers (no deadline; e-zine)

updated: 
Saturday, August 21, 1999 - 4:13pm
Kim Wells

"Women Writers: A Zine" has moved, so anyone interested in information,
applications
for staff or occasional writer positions, or any other general Zine type
info,
should check the new site URL:
http://www.womenwriters.net
Please be sure to check out the page that describes the difference between a
"staff" and "occasional" writer, and see sample "bios"
before sending your information. The direct URL for that page is:
http://www.womenwriters.net/contribute.htm
Finally, we are now accepting original poetry (minimum of 5 poems must be
submitted) and

CFP: Book Reviews in Cyberculture (website)

updated: 
Saturday, May 15, 1999 - 6:06pm
David Silver

The Resource Center for Cyberculture Studies (RCCS) seeks scholars from
across the disciplines to review books devoted to the emerging field of
cyberculture. Book reviews run from 1000 to 2000 words and are published
online each month. To give potential reviewers a feel for what we are
looking for, recently reviewed books include: Ellen Ullman's CLOSE TO
THE MACHINE: TECHNOPHILIA AND ITS DISCONTENTS; David Lyon and Elia Zureik,
editors, COMPUTERS, SURVEILLANCE, AND PRIVACY; Anne Balsamo's TECHNOLOGIES
OF THE GENDERED BODY: READING CYBORG WOMEN; and Julian Dibbell's MY TINY
LIFE: CRIME AND PASSION IN A VIRTUAL WORLD. RCCS is especially interested
in finding scholars to review the following titles:

CFP: Poetry Lessons (no deadline; website)

updated: 
Tuesday, April 27, 1999 - 1:35am
Staff

CFP: Lessons in Poetry; Form and Substance
Date: 4/25/99
From: www.apoetborn.com
 Teachers Corner Section
Due: As Soon As Possible, but no deadline

A Poet Born (http://www.apoetborn.com), invites papers on any type
or area of poetry, that teach a particular lesson in the genre.

A Poet Born wishes to bring good poetry, as well as inspiration and
guidance in the genre, to a whole new arena that allows poetry to
be more accessible and less mysterious to the computer generation.

CFP: Media, Culture, and Technology (e-journal)

updated: 
Monday, April 19, 1999 - 4:41pm
Andreas Kitzmann

http://www.kk.kau.se/mct/start.html

      Welcome to M/C/T a journal/e-zine concerned with Media, Culture and
Technology. M/C/T is a new journal for a new medium for a new millenium.

      M/C/T encourages writing that challenges given assumptions about the
information society. We seek to analyse, critique, probe and raise
questions about the intersecting vectors of media, culture and technology.
We invite our readers to join in the conversation and write for M/C/T. We
encourage open hypertexts/ cybertexts.

UPDATE: American Victorian Women Writers (Web Page and E-journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 23, 1999 - 3:41am
Kim & Andrew Wells

Announcing an updated call for papers to the Award Winning Website
E-Journal:
"Domestic Goddesses: AKA Scribbling Women." The URL for the site is
http://lonestar.texas.net/~kwells/dg1.htm check it out before you submit.
(Or even if you don't submit-- constructive comments welcome!)

I am looking for papers, from 3-40 pages, discussing any aspect of the
literature and/or lives of:

Louisa May Alcott, Kate Chopin, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Willa Cather,
Sarah Orne Jewett, Edith Wharton, Charlotte Perkins Gilman and, soon to be
added: Susan Warner.
Particularly useful are guides to research (see the Gilman guide for
examples)

CFP: Teachers of Writing (no deadline; e-journal)

updated: 
Tuesday, February 16, 1999 - 7:59am
James A. Inman

** Please forward where appropriate.
** Apologies in advance for cross-posting.

_Kairos: A Journal for Teachers of Writing in Webbed Environments_ is an
electronic journal designed to serve as a peer-reviewed resource for
teachers, researchers, and tutors of writing at the college and university
level, including Technical Writing, Business Writing, Professional
Communication, Creative Writing, Composition, and Literature. We are
located online at http://english.ttu.edu/kairos

For the News section of issue 4.1, we are soliciting the following sorts
of texts:

CFP: TEXT Technology (no deadline; journal)

updated: 
Friday, January 8, 1999 - 9:53pm
Peter Sands

******** PLEASE CROSSPOST *********

TEXT Technology CALL FOR PAPERS and REVIEWS

_TEXT Technology: the Journal of Computer Text Processing_ seeks papers
and reviews of Internet sites and related materials. We seek reviews of
websites and web development tools relevant to humanities computing and
text processing—from word processing and concordances to SGML tools, and
everything in between.

CFP: Teaching & Technology (on-line journal)

updated: 
Saturday, July 18, 1998 - 4:16am
Julia Keefer

> The WWW Journal for Online Education for the World Association for Online
> Education is seeking submissions for its first edition. We are concerned
> with issues related to teaching and researching online and in
> cyber-enhanced classes, as well as how traditional knowledge and concepts
> of self are transformed in cyberspace.
>
> Although the Journal is multidisciplinary and eclectic with both academic
> and non-academic articles, this posting seeks MLA articles on How the

CFP: Victorian Women Writers (Web Page)

updated: 
Wednesday, June 10, 1998 - 5:42pm
Kim & Andrew Wells

With the Internet growing to include more than just chat and xxx sites,
there's plenty of room for even academia! There seems to be a growth of
literature and literary criticism websites that cater to academics,
undergraduates, and interested readers alike, so let's jump on the
bandwagon! I am interested in papers from grad students as well as
professional scholars.

A PhD student, (me) who will be at Texas A & M soon, is creating a
webpage called "Domestic Goddesses: AKA Scribbling Women." The URL for
the site is http://lonestar.texas.net/~kwells/dg1.htm check it out
before you submit.

CFP: TEXT Technology (journal)

updated: 
Thursday, May 28, 1998 - 6:17pm
Peter Sands

TEXT Technology CALL FOR PAPERS and REVIEWS

_TEXT Technology: the Journal of Computer Text Processing_ seeks papers and
reviews of Internet sites and related materials. We seek reviews of
websites and web development tools relevant to humanities computing and
text processing—from word processing and concordances to SGML tools, and
everything in between. We also seek critical and analytical papers that
address issues of emerging technologies on the Internet, including the
World Wide Web, hypertext and hypermedia, innovative approaches to
teaching and research that employ Internet technologies, the state of
published research on these areas, and just about anything else to do
with the Web.

CFP: Computers and the Humanities (journal)

updated: 
Friday, March 13, 1998 - 7:58pm
Nancy M. Ide

************************************************************************
      CALL FOR PAPERS CALL FOR PAPERS CALL FOR PAPERS
************************************************************************

                    COMPUTERS AND THE HUMANITIES

For over thirty years, Computers and the Humanities (CHum) has been the
premier international journal for publications on language, text, and
humanities-related research.

CFP: TEXT Technology (journal)

updated: 
Friday, March 13, 1998 - 7:50pm
Peter Sands

******** PLEASE CROSSPOST *********

TEXT Technology CALL FOR PAPERS and REVIEWS

CFP: TEXT Technology (humanities computing)

updated: 
Friday, March 1, 1996 - 10:52pm
Jack Lynch

                            TEXT Technology:
                The Journal of Computer Text Processing
                        Is Now Calling for Papers

Starting in 1996, Wright State University will begin publishing TEXT
Technology: The Journal of Computer Text Processing. Previously published
at Dakota State University under the editorship of Eric Johnson, this
quarterly has published articles dealing with a variety of subjects
concerning the production of texts through electronic means. A listing of
the table of contents of the Summer 1995 issue will give some idea of the
range of the articles:

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