IDEAH Interdisciplinary Digital Engagement in Arts & Humanities

Rédaction : Lindsey Seatter (Editor-in-chief), Jesse Thomas (Managing editor)

À propos

About

Interdisciplinary Digital Engagement in Arts & Humanities (IDEAH) is a peer-reviewed, online, open access journal committed to publishing digital humanities research, as it is most broadly and inclusively defined, including work in fields such as media studies, scholarly communication, digital public humanities, textual studies, digital pedagogy, and beyond. IDEAH promotes an interdisciplinary approach to scholarship; we encourage submissions from authors across institutional faculties as well as from individuals working in academic-aligned roles and independent scholars. IDEAH is a Canadian Social Knowledge Institute (C-SKI; c-ski.ca) journal, with roots in the Digital Humanities Summer Institute (DHSI) community.

Submissions

Thank you for your interest!

Interdisciplinary Engagement in Arts & Humanities welcomes submissions on any area of digital scholarship, with specific focus on digital humanities, media studies, scholarly communication, digital public humanities, textual studies, and digital pedagogy.

If you would like to submit a paper for inclusion in an open issue, inquire about other publication opportunities, or submit a proposal for a special issue, please contact the Managing Editor via ideahjournal [at] gmail [dot] com.

In general, we will review submissions quarterly.

Coordonnées

Politique éditoriale et éthique

Policies

Copyright Policy

IDEAH authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship.

Open Access Policy

All articles published in IDEAH are open access and free to read. Our default licence is the Creative Commons attribution license, or CC-BY: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.  Articles are also assigned a Digital Object Identifier or DOI upon publication, for persistent identification. 

Review Policy

Interdisciplinary Engagement in Arts & Humanities uses a blended review process that combines editorial assessment with double-blind peer review. 

All submissions are initially assessed by the Managing Editor or Special Issue Editor(s), who review the materials to ensure that they adequately meet the journal’s requirements of scope, do not contain plagiarized material, and are ready for peer review. If a submission is assessed as ready, it is then formatted for anonymity and sent to peer reviewers. Peer reviewers submit their comments and recommendations to the Managing Editor or Special Issue Editor(s); these remarks are then formatted for anonymity and returned to the author(s). Upon appropriate revision, the journal will supply a final decision on publication. The journal’s decision will be one of the following:

  • Accept, no revisions
  • Accept, revisions
  • Revise and resubmit
  • Decline

Registering as a Reviewer: if you would like to volunteer as a peer reviewer for IDEAH, please submit your contact information using the following form https://forms.gle/nBUokoRfYwH6n19u5.

Generative Artificial Intelligence Policy
The use of generative artificial intelligence for the composition of submissions is prohibited; the person(s) submitting the articles must be the author(s). The use of generative artificial intelligence for research purposes is permitted if clearly cited.

Instruction pour les auteurs

Style Guide

Style Guide

All submissions should be sent to the editor(s) in one of the following formats:.doc,.docx,.odt, or.txt.

All submissions should use a 12-point, serif font (preferably, Times New Roman) and be formatted in double spacing. New paragraphs should be indented 0.5 inches and new sentences should follow a single space after the period.

The title of your submission should appear in title case*, centred, and bold at the top of your submission. Author information (name and affiliation) should be listed centred on the line below the title. If you have an ORCID ID it should be listed centred on the line below the author information.

Title case

Capitalize all nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs, adverbs and subordinate conjunctions (i.e. as, because, although) and uses lowercase for all articles, coordinate conjunctions and prepositions.

Use title case for the title of your submission and for all headings.

Example: Here is an Example of Title Case

Headings

Use the “Styles” tool in Microsoft Word or LibreOffice. Style your headings as follows:

Heading 1: Bold

Heading 2: Underlined

Heading 3: Italicized

Footnotes

IDEAH uses footnotes instead of endnotes. Footnotes should be placed following the period as shown in the example below. Avoid using footnotes for purposes of referencing, with in-text citations used instead. If in-text citations cannot be used, a source can be cited as part of a footnote.

Example: This is where the author should place their footnote. ¹

Spelling, Punctuation, and Minutiae

At this time, all submissions must be made in English. Spelling should follow Canadian/British conventions, unless the author is quoting material with alternative spelling or referring to a proper noun where the official spelling should then be used instead. All acronyms should be spelled out in full upon their first use only followed by initials noted in parentheses, as exemplified below.

Example: Interdisciplinary Engagement in Arts & Humanities (IDEAH)

Submissions should abide by Canadian/British grammar rules. In particular, authors should be aware of the following conventions:

Use of the Oxford comma, which dictates the formatting of lists within sentences

Example: This comma convention is known as the Oxford comma, the serial comma, or the Harvard comma.

 

Use of the hanging apostrophe for possessives ending in “s”

Example: Digital Humanities’

  • Differentiation between the format of a hyphen (-) and a dash (--)

Lists that do not need to define hierarchy or order of value, should use bullet points. If the list requires a specific sequence, it should appear numbered. Lists should be used sparingly to maximize their impact.

Numbers zero to nine should be spelled out in whole words; numbers 10 and over should be indicated numerically. Except in the following circumstances:

  • If the sentence includes a series of numbers, then numerical indications must be used
  • If the number appears as part of a dataset, in conjunction with a symbol or as part of a table, then the numerical indication must be used
  • If the number is less than zero or includes a decimal point, then the numerical indication must be used
  • If a sentence starts with a number, then it must be spelled out in whole words

Symbols are permitted in the text and in tables as long as they are commonly understood or specifically defined by the author.

Formulae must be proofed carefully by the author as editors will not edit formulae: formulae will appear in the order laid out in the publication. LaTeX equations can be embedded directly into the main text. If you have used an alternative software to create the formulae, consider including this as an image.

Figures (Tables, Code, and Media)

The inclusion of accompanying diagrams and images is encouraged, as long as the author has legal right to disseminate such media. Please see the list below for appropriate permissions:

  • If the media belongs to you: There is a caption or comment indicating that it is yours and you have the right to reprint it.
  • If the media is under a CC0 or CC-By license: The caption includes licensing information (name of the creator, what license it is under)
  • If the media is under any other license: You have received permission to reprint the figure from the original creator AND the caption includes licensing information (as above), along with a note saying that permission has been granted.

The source files for each media material should be sent separately (in a zipped file). Accepted file formats are:.jpg,.png,.gif,.mp3,.wav,.ogg, mp4 or.webm. Tables can be recreated and embedded directly into the text.

All submissions should cite tables and media within the text using consecutive, Arabic numeration. Citations should be placed within the text at the appropriate point, and should include a brief, explanatory information (for example: title, source, the kind of description that is included in alt text) and copyright information (for example: creator name, license, any relevant permissions), if necessary.

If you are including lines of code, please format them as a block quote in Consolas or Courier font.

Quotation and Citation

All submissions should use double quotation marks (“ ”) except for quotes within another speech, which should use single quotation marks (‘ ’). Quotations that are longer than four lines in length should be formatted as a block quotation. Block quotations should be indented 0.5 inches.

In-text citations and the reference list should follow current MLA guidelines.

The reference list should appear at the end of the submission titled “Works Cited” and should only include materials cited in the text. Entries should be single spaced; each entry should begin at the margin and should indent any subsequent lines by 0.5 inches (a hanging indent). Please format DOIs as “https://doi.org/ XXX” and URLs as “https://XXX” and please ensure all links are clickable in manuscript preparation.

At the end of the submission, please include a contact email and a brief biography (less than 100 words) for each author.a

Comité de rédaction

Editors

Lindsey Seatter (Kwantlen Polytechnic University)
Jesse (J.T.) Thomas (University of Victoria)
 
International Advisory Board
Jason Boyd (Toronto Metropolitan University)
Constance Crompton (University of Ottawa)
Laura Estill (St. Francis Xavier University)
John Maxwell (Simon Fraser University)
Aaron Mauro (Brock University)
Ray Siemens (University of Victoria)
David Gaertner (University of British Columbia)
Harold Short (Kings College London, Emeritus)
Padmini Ray Murray (Design Beku)
Paul Arthur (Edith Cowan University)
Elisabeth Burr (Leipzig University, Emeritus)
James Cummings (University of Newcastle)
Julia Flanders (Northeastern University)
Jennifer Guiliano (Indiana University & Purdue University, Indianapolis)
Diane Jakacki (Bucknell University)
Najla Jarkas (Independent Researcher)
Roopika Risam (Dartmouth College)
Masahiro Shimoda (Musashino University)
 
Founding Editors
Alyssa Arbuckle (CRKN & Érudit)
Lindsey Seatter (Kwantlen Polytechnic University)
Ray Siemens (University of Victoria)