[Humanist] 30.712 editor for Programming Historian; fellowships (Maynooth)
Humanist Discussion Group
willard.mccarty at mccarty.org.uk
Sat Feb 4 11:40:45 CET 2017
Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 30, No. 712.
Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London
www.digitalhumanities.org/humanist
Submit to: humanist at lists.digitalhumanities.org
[1] From: Susan Schreibman <susan.schreibman at gmail.com> (50)
Subject: visiting fellow opportunities Maynooth University
[2] From: Adam Crymble <adam.crymble at gmail.com> (28)
Subject: Programming Historian seeks subject specialist editor
--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 3 Feb 2017 09:19:22 +0000
From: Susan Schreibman <susan.schreibman at gmail.com>
Subject: visiting fellow opportunities Maynooth University
Visiting Fellowship Scheme
Faculty of Arts, Celtic Studies and Philosophy
Maynooth University
Academic Year 2017-18
The Faculty of Arts, Celtic Studies and Philosophy and /An Foras Feasa
/Research Institute at Maynooth University are pleased to announce the
call for applications for the Visiting Fellowship Scheme in the
Humanities for the academic year 2017-18. We especially welcome
colleagues in the area of digital humanities.
The duration of the visiting fellowship is envisaged as ordinarily
between one and six months; applications for a shorter or longer
duration will be considered. Preference will be given to Fellows whose
residence coincides when students are in term and Fellows from outside
Ireland. Only in exceptional circumstances will Fellowships be awarded
to researchers normally resident in Ireland.
Fellows will receive office space and office facilities from /An Foras
Feasa /in the Iontas Building, a state-of-the-art humanities research
institute, along with full library access and computer facilities. There
is a robust and welcoming research culture at Maynooth University and
Fellows will be facilitated in achieving their research goals while in
residence.
Fellows will be asked to provide one seminar or a workshop to
postgraduate students in the Researcherâs field of interest, as well as
a guest lecture to the University community. A limited number of travel
stipends of â¬500 will be available; preference will be given to
applicants with limited institutional funding.
The current call will close on 31 March 2017. Thereafter applications
will be considered on a rolling basis. To apply, please complete The
current call will close on 31 March 2017. Thereafter applications will
be considered on a rolling basis. To apply, please complete the form
available here:
https://www.maynoothuniversity.ie/foras-feasa/visiting-fellowships
and return it to foras.feasa at nuim.ie <mailto:foras.feasa at nuim.ie>.
For informal queries, please contact Professor Susan Schreibman,
Director of An Foras Feasa (susan.schreibman at nuim.ie)
Note: The fellowship does not include accommodation. However, short-stay
accommodation may be booked through Maynooth Campus Conference and
Accommodation (see http://www.maynoothcampus.com) at very reasonable
rates. Alternatively, for longer stays, a variety of accommodation is
available in the Maynooth vicinity.
--
Susan Schreibman
Professor of Digital Humanities
Director of An Foras Feasa
Iontas Building
Maynooth University
Maynooth, Co. Kildare
email: susan.schreibman at nuim.ie
phone: +353 1 708 3451
fax: +353 1 708 4797
--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 4 Feb 2017 10:25:30 +0000
From: Adam Crymble <adam.crymble at gmail.com>
Subject: Programming Historian seeks subject specialist editor
Dear Fellow Humanists,
The Programming Historian (http://programminghistorian.org) is seeking an
editor to work actively to solicit and edit lessons in a specific area or
areas within the digital humanities. These lessons will focus on the
analysis and interpretation phase of the research process, helping readers
to move from digital data to publishable research.
Themes might include (but are not limited to):
- Corpus Linguistics
- Geographic Analyses of geospatial data
- Network Analyses
- Image Analysis
- Visualisation and analysis of statistical data
There is significant scope to make this role your own. The editorial board
will offer support on the practices of *The Programming Historian’s*
editorial approaches and policies. In keeping with our commitment to
diversity and access to digital humanities, the project team are *particularly
interested in hearing from women, members of any minority groups, and
citizens of non-English speaking countries*.
Full details are available on the announcement:
http://programminghistorian.org/posts/subject-specialist-editor
Please note that this is a VOLUNTEER ACADEMIC SERVICE POSITION and there is
no salary or stipend associated with this role.
Any questions, please direct to Adam Crymble (adam.crymble at gmail.com)
Adam Crymble
Editor, Programming Historian
http://programminghistorian.org
Lecturer of Digital History
University of Hertfordshire, UK
More information about the Humanist
mailing list