The
internet is a born-digital medium, but for a number of years many histories of
the internet have used traditional non-computational methods such as document
analysis and interviews. However, recent studies of the archived web have
benefited from the born-digital nature of the Web and have fruitfully used
computational methods to explore the internet’s past. Although
the use of computational methods is not necessary just because the object of
study itself is digital, with this special issue of Internet Histories we
would like to map and present some of the possibilities and challenges related
to the use of computational methods within historical studies of the internet
and the web.
We welcome
articles about any use of computers to study the internet's history, from
computational methods used to study digitized documents such as scanned
documents and other similar sources to established and emerging computational
methods used to study the internet itself, from email lists to USENET archives
to the archived web and beyond. Articles can be either theoretical,
methodological or can explore the findings of studies.
Topics can
include, but are not limited to:
- document studies using text mining or similar computational techniques;
- studies using network analysis, image analysis or similar digital methods;
- the importance of collecting and preserving digital sources and the interface between collections and computational methods;
- the historical development of computational methods and tools;
- approaches to develop infrastructure to enable the study of born-digital documents;
- commercial vs. academic approaches to computational methods;
- computational methods used to study email lists, web archives, social media, and more;
- the interplay between internet histories and digital humanities;
- the use of social media as a historical source;
- surprise us! — computational methods may have been used to write histories of the internet in ways we could not even imagine...
Submissions
We ask for
abstracts of a maximum of 700 words to be emailed to Niels Brügger
(nb@cc.au.dk) and Ian Milligan (i2millig@uwaterloo.ca) no later than 7
December 2018. Authors of accepted abstracts are invited to submit an article,
and notification about acceptance will be sent by 23 December 2018. Please note
that acceptance of abstract does not imply final publication as all articles
have to go through the journal's usual review process.
Time
schedule
7 Dec 2018:
due date for abstracts
23
December: notification of acceptance
April 2019:
accepted articles to be submitted
May-July:
review process and revisions
More
information on Internet Histories: Digital Technology, Culture and Society.
Editors of
special issue: Niels Brügger & Ian Milligan
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