[Sig-l] Call for I-Stories: SIG History and Foundations of Information Science
IBEKWE-SANJUAN Fidelia
fidelia.ibekwe-sanjuan at univ-amu.fr
Thu May 7 04:38:15 EDT 2015
*Reminder*.Please circulate this to your colleagues, students, virtual
and physical communities of peers. I'm sure many will have hilarious,
funny and witty encounters with information to share.
*+++++++ Call for I-Stories **+++++++ **
*
** ** ** ** ** **** *SIG History & Foundations of Information Science
*
http://www.asis.org/SIG/SIGHFIS/
**
Information and communication phenomena are at the heart of our daily
lives. They are how we know things and yet our understanding of these
concepts and underlying phenomena are at best slippery. Just when we
think we’ve pinned or penned them down nicely with a few well chosen
phrases, we discover that those phrases are inadequate, that others
disagree with our definitions or that many other conceptions abound. Not
to bore you with the many varied conceptions of information, the aim of
this call for I-Stories is to bring forth, through everyday experience,
the many different things information can mean to different people or to
the same person in different circumstances in a lively and entertaining
manner.
The SIG History & Foundations of Information Science solicits stories on
how information and its understanding affect our daily lives, be it in
work situations, in our private lives, in our research. The stories of
information and around information should showcase how effective or
ineffective the concept may be, how it can mean different things to
different people, how that may have got you into misunderstandings//and
how that has got you thinking about information in general. The stories
may concern an event, something that happened to you or to someone you
know, a talk you heard or involve well known scholars and how they have
grappled with this open-ended question.
We encourage scholars, practitioners, and especially students to send us
a text of at most, 1000 words which can be illustrated with drawings.
A jury chosen from SIG HFIS members will choose 5 stories that shed
startling, informative and unexpected insights into our understanding of
the phenomenon we call information and of the field we call information
science/studies.
Stories by students will receive particular attention and if selected,
their authors will receive a 1 year free membership to ASIST and to
HFIS. Membership benefits are varied and can be consulted at
http://www.asis.org/.
Stories written by practitioners or faculty members if selected will
receive a gift card of $30 as well as 1 year free membership to SIG HFIS.
Please send your stories to fidelia.ibekwe-sanjuan at univ-amu.fr
<mailto:fidelia.ibekwe-sanjuan at univ-amu.fr>by 30^th may.
The jury will render the result of its deliberation by 30^th June.
Fidelia Ibekwe-SanJuan
HFIS chair (2014-2015)
--
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Fidelia Ibekwe-SanJuan (Ph.D.)
Full Professor (Professeur des Universités)
School of Journalism & Communication (EJCAM)
http://ejcam.univ-amu.fr/
Aix-Marseille University - France.
Homepage: http://fidelia1.free.fr/
IRSIC research team: http://irsic.univ-amu.fr/
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