Digital Futures: The Digital Humanities in Islamic Studies seeks to create a forum for IIS staff, students, and alumni to share emerging work, test innovative methodologies, and create environments for shared thinking about how digital tools can support the Institute’s core research areas, including but not limited to manuscript and textual studies, historical and doctrinal inquiry of contemporary Muslim societies and their practices, translation and interpretation, and the stewardship of archives and special collections. The conference also encourages critical discussion of the use of artificial intelligence in academic life and in Islamic Studies, including questions relating to epistemology, authority, bias, and responsible use.
Innovation has long been understood as a means of deepening knowledge, even as it comes with risk. When approached critically and responsibly, digital methods can renew this ethos at The Institute by opening new ways of interrogating texts, contexts, and communities, while also strengthening how research is curated, communicated, and preserved.
This call to IIS faculty, students, staff, PhD scholarship recipients and alumni welcomes proposals that engage digital humanities within The Institute’s areas of research. Contributions may be methodological, critical, pedagogical, practice-based, or collaborative, and may draw on IIS publications, ongoing research, teaching, and The Institute’s repositories