Interfaces: Essays and Reviews in Computing and Culture (CFP)
Dear Colleagues, Want to announce a new journal and its call: ******* *Interfaces: Essays and Reviews in Computing and Culture* *General Call for Submissions * *(Short Essays and Review Essays)* The Charles Babbage Institute for Computing, Information, and Culture (CBI) is launching a new eJournal. It is entitled *Interfaces: Essays and Reviews in Computing and Culture*. It will have a continuous publication model with publication date for each essay/article (no waiting in queue) and push email to subscribers (and volumes by calendar year).* Interfaces will exclusively publish short essay articles (1,500 to 3,000 words) and review essays (books, film, physical/virtual exhibits, other media) on computer/software/internet studies.* *Interfaces* will be co-edited by CBI Director Jeffrey Yost and CBI Archivist Amanda Wick. The editors are especially interested in content connecting the history of computing/IT studies with contemporary social, cultural, political, legal, economic, and environmental issues--e.g. essays on gender, race, class, users, human computer interaction, identity, labor, gaming, automation, capitalism, inequality, AI, algorithmic thinking, local or global environmental ecosystems, law/criminal justice, cryptocurrencies, security, leisure, and privacy. It, however, is not limited to these (any computing history or historically grounded or contextualized IT studies topics/themes are in scope). The journal seeks to be an interface between disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, and sciences/medicine (including/especially CS, HCI, information science, and sciences of the artificial); as well as an interface between academic and broader audiences--our reasoning for keeping essays short, strongly encouraging use of images (CBI has thousands digitized and online, and more than 150,000 overall), being timely (quick response, relatively rapid submission to publication), and pushing for highly accessible writing. Types of* computing history/IT studies essays* could include (but definitely are not limited to): - Essays connecting historical literature (your work and/or that of others) to contemporary societal issues - Essays presenting a case history/study you developed that resonated with students - Editorial-style essay that draws from history or makes fundamental historical connections - Review essay on two or more books on a topic/theme - Review essay on film, museum exhibit/virtual exhibit, gaming, art, music, or other media - Essays on imaginative literature, science fiction - Essays on historiography and/or archival theory - Essays on social, cultural, or economic theory CBI is a leading archives and research institute, and for decades has hosted web publications, including serials of our own (we are experienced in archiving and providing access to digital content over the very long term). *To submit *to* Interfaces: *Send a Word file (1,500 words to 3,000 words) of your essay, which includes a bibliography/sources at the end (bib., image captions, and 75 word or shorter bio, do not count to word maximum). Authors should use in-text parenthetical cites (MLA) with no footnotes/endnotes/note text. Essays should be broadly accessible and seek to avoid, or greatly limit, disciplinary jargon (and if used, done sparingly and clearly defined). Authors retain copyright and only sign a license form allowing *Interfaces* to publish (and the journal is open/free access). Send to Jeffrey Yost (yostx003@umn.edu), Amanda Wick ( abwick@umn.edu), or the general email cbi@umn.edu Authors are strongly encouraged to touch base with Jeffrey or Amanda for feedback on an essay idea, but this is not required and if you prefer, you can just send a submission. ****** With it being continuous publication, and to kick it off, I wrote an essay (PDF is attached--journal will present in both a mobile optimized web version and PDF) entitled "Where Dinosaurs Roam and Programmers Play: Reflections on Infrastructure, Maintenance, and Inequality." PDF attached and Web version and PDF link at https://justcode.cbi.umn.edu/interfaces If you are not already, Amanda and I encourage signing on to CBI's email list. To be added to our email list which includes Interfaces notifications, simply email cbi@umn.edu with "subscribe" in the subject line We hope you will consider submitting a short essay to this new publication (articles are reviewed by editors), and/or encourage colleagues to do so. Please forward to potentially interested people. Please email us with any questions. Best, Jeff Jeffrey R. Yost, Ph.D. Director, Charles Babbage Institute Research Professor, Program in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine 222 21st Avenue South University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN 55455 612 624 5050 Phone 612 625 8054 Fax
Dear Jeff and Amanda, congratulations on this new initiative. I very much welcome the launch something new and admire your courage. Indeed, the field of history of computing and IT studies is simmering, seething and boiling, as is shown by the recent harvest of exciting book publications in all directions. It is a timely gesture to offer a venue for good thoughts. Cheers, Gerard ps There used to be a journal on OR/MS called Interfaces, but your subtitle offers sufficient distinction. ________________________________ Van: Members <members-bounces@lists.sigcis.org> namens Jeffrey Yost <yostx003@umn.edu> Verzonden: donderdag 14 mei 2020 23:23 Aan: sigcis Onderwerp: [SIGCIS-Members] Interfaces: Essays and Reviews in Computing and Culture (CFP) Dear Colleagues, Want to announce a new journal and its call: ******* Interfaces: Essays and Reviews in Computing and Culture General Call for Submissions (Short Essays and Review Essays) The Charles Babbage Institute for Computing, Information, and Culture (CBI) is launching a new eJournal. It is entitled Interfaces: Essays and Reviews in Computing and Culture. It will have a continuous publication model with publication date for each essay/article (no waiting in queue) and push email to subscribers (and volumes by calendar year). Interfaces will exclusively publish short essay articles (1,500 to 3,000 words) and review essays (books, film, physical/virtual exhibits, other media) on computer/software/internet studies. Interfaces will be co-edited by CBI Director Jeffrey Yost and CBI Archivist Amanda Wick. The editors are especially interested in content connecting the history of computing/IT studies with contemporary social, cultural, political, legal, economic, and environmental issues--e.g. essays on gender, race, class, users, human computer interaction, identity, labor, gaming, automation, capitalism, inequality, AI, algorithmic thinking, local or global environmental ecosystems, law/criminal justice, cryptocurrencies, security, leisure, and privacy. It, however, is not limited to these (any computing history or historically grounded or contextualized IT studies topics/themes are in scope). The journal seeks to be an interface between disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, and sciences/medicine (including/especially CS, HCI, information science, and sciences of the artificial); as well as an interface between academic and broader audiences--our reasoning for keeping essays short, strongly encouraging use of images (CBI has thousands digitized and online, and more than 150,000 overall), being timely (quick response, relatively rapid submission to publication), and pushing for highly accessible writing. Types of computing history/IT studies essays could include (but definitely are not limited to): * Essays connecting historical literature (your work and/or that of others) to contemporary societal issues * Essays presenting a case history/study you developed that resonated with students * Editorial-style essay that draws from history or makes fundamental historical connections * Review essay on two or more books on a topic/theme * Review essay on film, museum exhibit/virtual exhibit, gaming, art, music, or other media * Essays on imaginative literature, science fiction * Essays on historiography and/or archival theory * Essays on social, cultural, or economic theory CBI is a leading archives and research institute, and for decades has hosted web publications, including serials of our own (we are experienced in archiving and providing access to digital content over the very long term). To submit to Interfaces: Send a Word file (1,500 words to 3,000 words) of your essay, which includes a bibliography/sources at the end (bib., image captions, and 75 word or shorter bio, do not count to word maximum). Authors should use in-text parenthetical cites (MLA) with no footnotes/endnotes/note text. Essays should be broadly accessible and seek to avoid, or greatly limit, disciplinary jargon (and if used, done sparingly and clearly defined). Authors retain copyright and only sign a license form allowing Interfaces to publish (and the journal is open/free access). Send to Jeffrey Yost (yostx003@umn.edu<mailto:yostx003@umn.edu>), Amanda Wick (abwick@umn.edu<mailto:abwick@umn.edu>), or the general email cbi@umn.edu<mailto:cbi@umn.edu> Authors are strongly encouraged to touch base with Jeffrey or Amanda for feedback on an essay idea, but this is not required and if you prefer, you can just send a submission. ****** With it being continuous publication, and to kick it off, I wrote an essay (PDF is attached--journal will present in both a mobile optimized web version and PDF) entitled "Where Dinosaurs Roam and Programmers Play: Reflections on Infrastructure, Maintenance, and Inequality." PDF attached and Web version and PDF link at https://justcode.cbi.umn.edu/interfaces<https://eur04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fjustcode.cbi.umn.edu%2Finterfaces&data=02%7C01%7Cg.alberts%40uva.nl%7C3c7a40032ffa4e93b09f08d7f84d6561%7Ca0f1cacd618c4403b94576fb3d6874e5%7C1%7C0%7C637250883635452583&sdata=ClYKxBs2CfMwjX48m7gfJ5Gk15NJLy04kY%2Bo%2FHu0xu8%3D&reserved=0> If you are not already, Amanda and I encourage signing on to CBI's email list. To be added to our email list which includes Interfaces notifications, simply email cbi@umn.edu<mailto:cbi@umn.edu> with "subscribe" in the subject line We hope you will consider submitting a short essay to this new publication (articles are reviewed by editors), and/or encourage colleagues to do so. Please forward to potentially interested people. Please email us with any questions. Best, Jeff Jeffrey R. Yost, Ph.D. Director, Charles Babbage Institute Research Professor, Program in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine 222 21st Avenue South University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN 55455 612 624 5050 Phone 612 625 8054 Fax
Let's keep Jeff and Amanda really busy for a while and write pieces that link history to contemporary issues (historiographical too) as there is much to be said and there are other channels picking up this kind of material, such as HNN, linkedIn and others. People want to hear from historians right now and not just our colleagues. This could be the channel to demonstrate that this is Your (Our) Time. Stay safe, write a lot. :--)) Jim On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 5:29 PM Alberts, Gerard <G.Alberts@uva.nl> wrote:
Dear Jeff and Amanda,
congratulations on this new initiative. I very much welcome the launch something new and admire your courage. Indeed, the field of history of computing and IT studies is simmering, seething and boiling, as is shown by the recent harvest of exciting book publications in all directions. It is a timely gesture to offer a venue for good thoughts.
Cheers,
Gerard
ps There used to be a journal on OR/MS called *Interfaces*, but your subtitle offers sufficient distinction.
------------------------------ *Van:* Members <members-bounces@lists.sigcis.org> namens Jeffrey Yost < yostx003@umn.edu> *Verzonden:* donderdag 14 mei 2020 23:23 *Aan:* sigcis *Onderwerp:* [SIGCIS-Members] Interfaces: Essays and Reviews in Computing and Culture (CFP)
Dear Colleagues,
Want to announce a new journal and its call:
*******
*Interfaces: Essays and Reviews in Computing and Culture*
*General Call for Submissions * *(Short Essays and Review Essays)*
The Charles Babbage Institute for Computing, Information, and Culture (CBI) is launching a new eJournal. It is entitled *Interfaces: Essays and Reviews in Computing and Culture*. It will have a continuous publication model with publication date for each essay/article (no waiting in queue) and push email to subscribers (and volumes by calendar year).* Interfaces will exclusively publish short essay articles (1,500 to 3,000 words) and review essays (books, film, physical/virtual exhibits, other media) on computer/software/internet studies.* *Interfaces* will be co-edited by CBI Director Jeffrey Yost and CBI Archivist Amanda Wick. The editors are especially interested in content connecting the history of computing/IT studies with contemporary social, cultural, political, legal, economic, and environmental issues--e.g. essays on gender, race, class, users, human computer interaction, identity, labor, gaming, automation, capitalism, inequality, AI, algorithmic thinking, local or global environmental ecosystems, law/criminal justice, cryptocurrencies, security, leisure, and privacy. It, however, is not limited to these (any computing history or historically grounded or contextualized IT studies topics/themes are in scope).
The journal seeks to be an interface between disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, and sciences/medicine (including/especially CS, HCI, information science, and sciences of the artificial); as well as an interface between academic and broader audiences--our reasoning for keeping essays short, strongly encouraging use of images (CBI has thousands digitized and online, and more than 150,000 overall), being timely (quick response, relatively rapid submission to publication), and pushing for highly accessible writing. Types of* computing history/IT studies essays* could include (but definitely are not limited to):
- Essays connecting historical literature (your work and/or that of others) to contemporary societal issues - Essays presenting a case history/study you developed that resonated with students - Editorial-style essay that draws from history or makes fundamental historical connections - Review essay on two or more books on a topic/theme - Review essay on film, museum exhibit/virtual exhibit, gaming, art, music, or other media - Essays on imaginative literature, science fiction - Essays on historiography and/or archival theory - Essays on social, cultural, or economic theory
CBI is a leading archives and research institute, and for decades has hosted web publications, including serials of our own (we are experienced in archiving and providing access to digital content over the very long term).
*To submit *to* Interfaces: *Send a Word file (1,500 words to 3,000 words) of your essay, which includes a bibliography/sources at the end (bib., image captions, and 75 word or shorter bio, do not count to word maximum). Authors should use in-text parenthetical cites (MLA) with no footnotes/endnotes/note text. Essays should be broadly accessible and seek to avoid, or greatly limit, disciplinary jargon (and if used, done sparingly and clearly defined). Authors retain copyright and only sign a license form allowing *Interfaces* to publish (and the journal is open/free access). Send to Jeffrey Yost (yostx003@umn.edu), Amanda Wick ( abwick@umn.edu), or the general email cbi@umn.edu Authors are strongly encouraged to touch base with Jeffrey or Amanda for feedback on an essay idea, but this is not required and if you prefer, you can just send a submission.
******
With it being continuous publication, and to kick it off, I wrote an essay (PDF is attached--journal will present in both a mobile optimized web version and PDF) entitled "Where Dinosaurs Roam and Programmers Play: Reflections on Infrastructure, Maintenance, and Inequality." PDF attached and Web version and PDF link at https://justcode.cbi.umn.edu/interfaces <https://eur04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fjustcode.cbi.umn.edu%2Finterfaces&data=02%7C01%7Cg.alberts%40uva.nl%7C3c7a40032ffa4e93b09f08d7f84d6561%7Ca0f1cacd618c4403b94576fb3d6874e5%7C1%7C0%7C637250883635452583&sdata=ClYKxBs2CfMwjX48m7gfJ5Gk15NJLy04kY%2Bo%2FHu0xu8%3D&reserved=0>
If you are not already, Amanda and I encourage signing on to CBI's email list. To be added to our email list which includes Interfaces notifications, simply email cbi@umn.edu with "subscribe" in the subject line
We hope you will consider submitting a short essay to this new publication (articles are reviewed by editors), and/or encourage colleagues to do so. Please forward to potentially interested people. Please email us with any questions.
Best, Jeff
Jeffrey R. Yost, Ph.D. Director, Charles Babbage Institute Research Professor, Program in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine
222 21st Avenue South University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN 55455
612 624 5050 Phone 612 625 8054 Fax _______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members at sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. Opinions expressed here are those of the member posting and are not reviewed, edited, or endorsed by SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://lists.sigcis.org/pipermail/members-sigcis.org/ and you can change your subscription options at http://lists.sigcis.org/listinfo.cgi/members-sigcis.org
-- James W. Cortada Senior Research Fellow Charles Babbage Institute University of Minnesota jcortada@umn.edu 608-274-6382
participants (3)
-
Alberts, Gerard -
James Cortada -
Jeffrey Yost