WWP Research and Encoding Calls for Papers and Conferences |
The following is a selected list of conferences and calls for papers with particular relevance to the WWP's areas of interest: early modern women's writing and electronic textuality. If you would like to post a call for papers or a conference announcement here, please contact Julia Flanders.
Women and Gender in the Early Modern World: In the past decade, the study of women and gender has offered some of the most vital and innovative challenges to scholarhsip on the early modern period. Ashgate's new series of interdisciplinary and comparative studies, "Women and Gender in the Early Modern World," takes up this challenge, reaching beyond geographical limitations to explore the experiences of early modern women and the nature of gender in Europe, the Americas, Asia, and Africa. Proposals for either single-author studies or edited collections are welcome.
Women Writers and Spirituality: Submissions are sought for a proposed volume of essays on representations of spirituality in women writers' texts. The collection will include essays on works from all literary and historical periods and from diverse ethnic and religious traditions. Two-page abstract or completed essay of 20-30 pages by 15 July 2000.
Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing and Association for Computing in the Humanities (ALLC/ACH) Joint International Conference: University of Glasgow, July 21-25, 2000. This is one of the major annual conferences in humanities computing, and brings together research in a wide variety of areas including text analysis, image processing, new media, digital editions, markup and language corpora, and teaching with online resources. The conference web site has further information.
Digital Resources in the Humanities: University of Sheffield, September 10-13, 2000. The annual Digital Resources in the Humanities conference is the major forum for all those involved in, and affected by, the digitization of our cultural heritage. Conference themes include the creation, delivery, use, integration, and impact of digital resources on research and teaching in the humanities. The conference web site has further information.
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