[SIGCIS-Members] Fwd: SIGCIS Workshop REMINDER - CFP Deadline June 15

M. Hicks meh20 at duke.edu
Wed Jun 15 18:27:03 PDT 2011


Hi all,

Just a quick last minute reminder--if you're toying with the idea of submitting something for this year's workshop, today's the day! Full details below, and remember that you can submit dissertation work in progress to be workshopped, as well as regular papers.

Any last minute questions can be directed to me at mhicks at ncsu.edu

Best,

Marie
________________
Marie Hicks, Ph.D.
Visiting Assistant Professor 
North Carolina State University
Raleigh, NC
mhicks at ncsu.edu
www.duke.edu/~meh20


Begin forwarded message:

> From: Thomas Haigh <thaigh at computer.org>
> Date: May 31, 2011 12:00:30 EDT
> To: members at sigcis.org
> Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] SIGCIS Workshop REMINDER - CFP Deadline June 15
> 

> Dear SIGCIS members,
> 
> Time flies, and what back in February seemed the hitherto hugely distant
> date of June 15 is now just over two weeks away. So if you've been thinking
> about getting together something for our third annual workshop at SHOT now
> would be a good time to act.
> 
> Full details online at http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11, including online
> submission for panels and abstracts, and for your convenience I'm pasting
> the original email below. 
> 
> To get you excited, here are a few updates:
> 
> 1) Tom Misa has agreed to deliver the keynote plenary lecture, addressing
> the workshop theme of "Cultures and Communities in the History of
> Computing."
> 
> 2) Both SIGCIS panels have been accepted for the main SHOT program. One is
> "Coded Narratives: Memory, Practice and Community in the History of
> Software" with Irina Nikiforova, Hansen Hsu and Joline Zepcevski. The other
> is "Geographies of Computing: Straddling the Divide Between the Global and
> the Local" with Gerard Alberts, David Nofte, Mark Prisetley, Janet Toland
> and Patryk Wasiak (plus Eden Medina as chair). There are also some
> interesting sounding panels accepted on communication networks, a panel with
> on the political aspects of international communications (including Paul
> Edwards speaking on computer modeling).
> 
> 3) Also the IEEE Annals board meeting is now confirmed to take place just
> before SHOT in the same location. So combining that with the sessions in the
> main program and the workshop we can be sure that there will be a lively
> turnout in our field that should carry over into the workshop.
> 
> 4) We will be presenting the third Computer History Museum book prize at the
> meeting. I have no idea which book the committee will pick, but they tell me
> we have a record number of submissions this year so we can be sure it will
> be a worthy winner.
> 
> Questions should be addressed to Marie Hicks who is serving as chair of the
> workshop program committee. Email meh20 at duke.edu. (Marie -- if we need to
> update that let me know...)
> 
> Best wishes,
> 
> Tom Haigh
> 
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> (ORIGINAL CALL FOLLOWS)
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> CALL FOR PAPERS
> SIGCIS Workshop 2011: Cultures and Communities in the History of Computing
> 
> 
> For the latest updates see http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11. 
> 
> DEADLINE for submissions: 15 June 2011
> 
> The Society for the History of Technology's Special Interest Group for
> Computers, Information and Society (SIGCIS - www.sigcis.org) welcomes
> submissions for its latest one day scholarly workshop on Materiality and
> Immateriality in the History of Computing. The workshop will be held in
> Cleveland, OH all day on Sunday, 6th November 2011. This is the final day of
> the annual SHOT meeting. SHOT has reserved that day for SIG events and
> therefore the symposium will not overlap scheduled sessions in the main
> program. For details on the main SHOT meeting see
> http://www.historyoftechnology.org/annual_meeting.html.
> 
> Workshop Theme: Information technologies are created to be used by people,
> and thus function within particular human communities. The workshop explores
> a range of disciplinary perspectives on the historical development of
> computing activity, among them 
> 
> *    Connections between and across communities, for example between
> users and producers, experts and non-experts, across disciplinary
> communities, within trading zones
> *    The publics of computing, whether in home, business, or science
> *    Communities of practice based around the use and/or creation of
> information technologies
> *    Use of computers within particular disciplinary traditions or
> institutions
> *    The cultures and subcultures of information technology
> 
> However our practice is to welcome contributions on all topics related to
> the history of computing whether or not there is an explicit connection with
> the annual theme. 
> 
> Our membership is interdisciplinary and proposals are expected from the
> perspectives of business history, labor history, social history, science
> studies and the history of science as well as from historians of technology.
> SHOT is collocated with HSS (history of science) and 4S (science studies)
> this year, so contributions from those perspectives would be particularly
> welcome. 
> 
> Proposals for entire sessions and individual presenters are both welcome. We
> hope to run special sessions featuring dissertations in progress and other
> works in progress. The workshop is a great opportunity to get helpful
> feedback on your projects in a relaxed and supportive environment. All
> proposals will be subject to a peer review process based on abstracts.
> 
> Suggested Formats: Individual contributions can fit one of a variety of
> formats
> 
> 1. Traditional 20 to 25-minute presentations followed by a question and
> answer session with the SIGCIS community. In this case a one-page abstract
> (maximum 400 words) will be reviewed and included in the electronic
> conference program. Abstracts should address the paper's topic, argument,
> evidence used, and contribution to the existing literature. A full version
> of the paper should be sent to the session commentator at least a week prior
> to the meeting.
> 
> 2. Dissertation proposals. We hope to include a dissertations in progress
> session, in which individuals will present their ongoing dissertation work
> and seek feedback from the history of computing community. In this case
> submit your dissertation proposal, which will be included in the electronic
> conference program if accepted. Participants will be encouraged to read this
> prior to the session. You will have five to ten minutes to introduce the
> material, leaving the bulk of time available for discussion.
> 
> 3. Works in progress. This is your chance to receive informal and expert
> discussion of draft dissertation chapters, journal articles, or book
> chapters. Submit a one page abstract (maximum 400 words) including
> discussion of the current state of the work and any specific kinds of
> feedback you are seeking. If your proposal is accepted you will need to
> supply the draft for discussion by 1 September for inclusion in the
> electronic program for the workshop. You will have five to ten minutes to
> introduce the material, leaving the bulk of time available for discussion.
> 
> 4. Proposals in other formats are also welcome. For example round table
> discussions, demonstrations of software of interest to historians of
> computing, or "author meets critics" sessions.
> 
> We follow the normal format for a history meeting. That is: selection on
> abstracts rather than full papers, no submission of full papers for regular
> sessions (although works in progress and dissertation proposals must be
> submitted in advance for inclusion on the workshop website), and no
> publication of proceedings (presenters are welcome to submit their work the
> SIGCIS Member Contributions collection). However presenters in regular
> sessions will be required to share some version of their paper at least two
> weeks in advance with the session commentator so that he or she can prepare
> insightful and helpful remarks.
> 
> Submission Procedure: All submissions should be made online via the SIGCIS
> website. People already scheduled to participate on the main SHOT program
> are welcome to submit an additional proposal to the SIGCIS workshop, but
> should make sure that there is no overlap between the two presentations.
> However program committee may choose to give higher priority to submissions
> from those not already presenting at SHOT. The same person should not be
> included as a panelist or speaker in more than one proposal to the SIGCIS
> Workshop, though it is OK to appear both as a speaker/panelist in one
> session and a chair or discussant in another.
> 
> Individual submissions should be made at
> http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11a. Note that this requires a one page
> curriculum vitae as well as the proposal itself in the form described above.
> 
> Proposals for complete sessions should be made at
> http://www.sigcis.org/workshop11b.
> 
> They should include:
> 
> *    a description of the session that explains how individual papers
> contribute to an overall theme)
> *    the names and email addresses of each presenter)
> *    an abstract and title for each presentation (in the form described
> above)
> *    a one-page c.v. for each presenter and other participant (including
> commentator or chair if named)
> 
> Travel Support: The top financial priority of SIGCIS is the support of
> travel expenses for graduate students, visiting faculty without
> institutional travel support, and others who would be unable to attend the
> meeting without travel assistance. The submission includes a box to check if
> you fall into one of these categories and would like to be considered for an
> award. These is no separate application form, though depending on the volume
> of requests and available resources we may need to contact you for further
> information before making a decision. Details on our travel grant program
> are at http://www.sigcis.org/travelaward.
> 
> Funding sources include donations from SIGCIS members at our annual meeting,
> income from the Mahoney Fund http://www.sigcis.org/mahoney and support from
> MIT Press for our annual book auction. Please note that the SHOT does not
> classify workshop presentations as participation in the SHOT annual meeting
> and so acceptance by SIGCIS does not realistically make you eligible for the
> main SHOT travel grant program.
> 
> Last Year's Workshop: This is the third annual SIGCIS workshop. The 2010
> event featured a plenary session with a distinguished keynote speaker
> followed by six further sessions grouped into two tracks. Around sixty
> people attended, many staying an extra night and attending a group dinner in
> the evening after the workshop. You can see last year's program at
> http://www.sigcis.org/mahoney and a report from the Charles Babbage
> Institute at http://www.cbi.umn.edu/newsletter/article5.html. We expect to
> follow a similar format this year.
> 
> Questions should be addressed to Marie Hicks who is serving as chair of the
> workshop program committee. Email meh20 at duke.edu.
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
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