Call for Papers: STS 2026

Venue: The New School, New York City

Dates:  3-5 June 2026

Materiality, Memory, Forgetting: Cross-currents in Textual Studies and Memory Studies

Abstract submission deadline: 1 February 2026

The Society for Textual Scholarship (North America) warmly invites scholars to participate in its annual conference to explore the rich and evolving relationship between Textual Studies and Memory Studies.

Proposals are welcome to engage with a wide range of topics, including (but not limited to):

  • Texts (broadly conceived) as Sites or Agents of Memory and Forgetting
  • Editorial Practice and the Politics of Remembrance
  • Manuscripts and Memory work 
  • Scribal Memory / Print Memory / Digital Memory
  • Text, Palimpsest, Memory
  • Textual Ruins, Fragmentary Memory 
  • Text as Monument / Monuments as Text
  • Archival Memory / Archival Forgetting
  • Archives and the Future of Memory
  • Memory, Materiality, and Textual Transmission
  • Textual scholarship in Transitional Justice and Historical Reckoning
  • Memory, Censorship, and the Re-writing of History
  • Canon, Memory, Forgetting: What/whose texts are remembered, whose are forgotten?
  • AI and Memory / AI’s Memory
  • Editing and Re-memory / Editing and Post-memory
  • Artifacts as Memory Sites
  • Postcolonial and Decolonial Approaches to Memory
  • Diaspora and the Textual Transmission of Memory
  • Textual Memory and Decolonization
  • Queer Memory
  • Testimony, Trauma, and Textual Forms
  • Aging Bodies / Texts of Memory
  • Memory and the Textual Poetics of Care
  • Memory in Marginalia, Annotations, and Paratexts

In a joint effort to strengthen the bonds between the Society for Textual Scholarship (STS) and The European Society for Textual Scholarship (ESTS), we invite our members to participate in the 2026 STS conference in New York. Proposed session formats may include workshops/seminars, panels, roundtables, and individual papers. As such, ESTS members planning to attend the conference are welcome to submit an individual paper proposal, informing the STS organisation that it should be included in the ESTS panel. Alternatively, a joint panel proposal of 3-4 ESTS members may also be submitted on behalf of the ESTS membership.

Abstracts should be submitted by 1 February 2026 to societyfortextualscholarship@gmail.com

Please do not hesitate to contact the ESTS Secretary if you need assistance to coordinate this delegation.

For more details, including how to submit, visit the conference website here.

Reminder: CfP ESTS 2026

Here is a gentle reminder that the submission deadline for our ESTS 2026 conference (28-30 May in Lublin, Poland) is 30 November!
This year’s theme is Edition and Interpretation, but, as usual, abstracts engaging with the full spectrum of textual studies and (digital) scholarly editing are also welcome.

Please visit the conference’s official website for more information.

We look forward to reading your submissions and hope to see you in Lublin!

Call for Papers: ESTS 2026

The 21st annual conference of the European Society for Textual Scholarship

Venue: John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Lublin, Poland

Dates:  28-30 May 2026

Pre-Conference Workshop: 27 May 2026

Edition and Interpretation

Abstract submission deadline: 30 November 2025

The European Society for Textual Scholarship warmly invites scholars, researchers, and practitioners to participate in its 21st annual conference, bringing together international experts in textual scholarship and textual culture. At the heart of this conference lies the concept of interpretation — a fundamental practice that bridges textual scholarship and literary criticism, opening productive dialogues between editorial methodologies and critical approaches to understanding texts.

The central focus of ESTS 2026 is the complex relationship between editorial practice and textual interpretation. We seek to examine how editorial decisions fundamentally shape textual understanding, and conversely, how interpretative frameworks inform editorial methodology. We welcome submissions that engage with the full spectrum of textual scholarship, encompassing both traditional philological approaches and innovative digital methodologies. We particularly encourage submissions that explore how scholarly editions generate new interpretative possibilities, how manuscripts and printed books reveal layers of meaning through their materiality, and how textual scholarship provides fresh angles and evidence for literary criticism.

We invite contributions addressing, but not limited to, the following areas:

  • Classical Textual Criticism: Theories and methodologies of scholarly editing, textual criticism, and philological practice, with attention to how editorial choices influence interpretative possibilities.
  • Genetic Criticism and Authorial Philology: Analysis of creative processes, textual materiality, and the editorial treatment of authorial drafts and variants, exploring how manuscript evidence shapes our understanding of literary works.
  • Material Texts and Interpretation: Studies of manuscripts, printed books, and other textual artifacts that demonstrate how physical features, layouts, marginalia, and paratexts contribute to meaning-making and interpretative practices. 
  • Interdisciplinary Approaches: Integration of literary studies, philosophy, linguistics, art history, and computational methods in textual research, with emphasis on interpretative frameworks.
  • Comparative Textual Criticism: Exploration of editorial traditions and methodologies across diverse cultural and linguistic contexts, examining how different editorial approaches yield distinct interpretative outcomes.
  • Digital Humanities in Textual Scholarship: TEI encoding, Handwritten Text Recognition (HTR) technologies, digital scholarly editions, visualisation of textual variants, and data interoperability standards, with attention to how digital tools open new interpretative dimensions. 
  • Case Studies: Critical editions of literary, philosophical, musical, or manuscript works that demonstrate the interplay between editorial practice and interpretation, with particular attention to how editorial challenges and solutions affect textual understanding and critical reception.
  • Editorial Practice and Literary Criticism: Explorations of how scholarly editions inform, challenge, or transform literary interpretation, and how interpretative theories and practices influence editorial decisions.

Submission Guidelines

  • Abstracts must be submitted in English (maximum 250 words + bio of maximum 100 words) through a submission platform on ests2026.arfi.kul.pl
  • Presentations will be allocated 20 minutes, followed by 10 minutes for discussion.
  • Contributors and panel chairs must pay the conference fee and must be members in good standing of the European Society for Textual Scholarship for 2026 (except invited speakers).
  • Conference Fees: standard registration €100; reduced rate (postgraduate students and early-career researchers) €75.

Important Dates

  • Abstract Submission Deadline: 30 November 2025
  • Notification of Acceptance: 20 January 2026
  • Conference Fee Payment Deadline: 31 March 2026
  • Final Programme Publication: 1 April 2026
  • Pre-Conference Workshop: 27 May 2026
  • Conference: 28–30 May 2026

For more details, including how to submit, visit the conference website here.

Call for Papers: ESTS 2025

The twentieth annual conference of the European Society for Textual Scholarship

For more details, including how to submit, visit the conference website here.

Venue: Centre d’Études Supérieures de la Renaissance, University of Tours

Dates:  28-30 April 2025

Manuscripts in the Age of Print

For its twentieth annual conference, the ESTS invites everyone to the heart of the Val de Loire to discuss manuscripts, visit beautiful castles, and enjoy the quality of its wines.

The conference topic is inspired by the newly awarded ERC project PRIMA, which focuses on manuscript production, circulation, and consumption in Ancient Regime Europe.

Call for papers is out! Deadline for application on the 22nd of November 2024

Call for papers

The invention and relatively rapid dissemination of print in 15th- and 16th-century Western Europe did not replace manuscript culture. Whether in the form of draft manuscripts, letters and journals, note-taking, margin annotations, manuscript dissemination to escape control, or documentary records, the two media—print and manuscript—continued to coexist, intertwining and influencing each other in complex ways across the globe. In various regions, from Europe to Asia, Africa, and the Americas, manuscripts remained central to intellectual, cultural, and religious practices, often complementing or resisting the spread of print. Although recent scholarship has addressed this dynamic in specific contexts, manuscript production is still rarely considered as a distinct phenomenon in the early modern and modern periods across different cultures. This oversight neglects the profound impact manuscripts had on intellectual and cultural life worldwide, where they served as vessels for innovation, subversion, and the preservation of alternative voices. Moreover, it overlooks the materiality of manuscripts, which developed in specific local and regional contexts, conveying unique physical characteristics that shaped both the form and content of the works themselves.

The conference will explore these and other uses of manuscripts, welcoming contributions that address:

  • Manuscript production and circulation during the early modern and modern periods
  • Modern codicology and handwriting studies
  • Print-to-manuscript and manuscript-to-print transitions and their coexistence 
  • Hybridization of the two media across different periods and regions
  • Digital representation and analysis of such documents, including Handwritten Text Recognition (HTR) and quantitative codicology
  • Study and assembling of public and private archives and libraries 
  • Scholarly editing of manuscripts and hybrid documents
  • Textuality of texts transmitted through manuscripts
  • Social networks and manuscript production (e.g., how social relationships, patronage, and collaboration among scribes, authors, and intellectuals influenced manuscript production and content)
  • Cross-cultural manuscript traditions (e.g., interactions between different manuscript practices and production centers, including trade, diplomacy, and scholarly exchanges across Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and other regions)
  • Censorship and media circulation

We also welcome contributions that examine the global persistence of manuscript culture alongside print in the early modern and modern periods, taking into account the diversity of manuscript traditions worldwide. This includes exploring how manuscripts remained essential for knowledge transmission, record-keeping, and resisting dominant discourses, even as print technologies became increasingly prevalent.

Other topics such as the theory and practice of textual scholarship and digital textual scholarship will also be welcomed.

Contributions to the ESTS Conference may take the following forms:

Research Papers
Individual scholars are welcome to submit proposals for papers which may then be selected for panels. 20 minutes in length. Please supply an abstract of 250 words (max) + bio of 100 words (max).

Panel sessions
We also invite groups of scholars (3 speakers) to submit proposals for thematically linked research paper panels. 90 minutes in length (3 x 20 minute papers + Q&A). Please supply 3 abstracts of 150 words (max) each + bios of 100 words (max) for each speaker. The organisers will give preference to panels that reflect the diversity of our field.

Roundtable
We also invite groups of scholars (up to 6 speakers) to submit proposals for thematically linked roundtable sessions. 90 minutes in length (10 mins per speaker + Q&A). Please supply an overall abstract of 350 words (250 words) for the roundtable + bios of 100 words (max) for each speaker.

Poster sessions
We will run a poster session as part of the main conference program. Topics of interest include all topics listed above. The poster session is an opportunity for researchers to discuss their early/ongoing work with attendees. Please provide an abstract of a maximum 250 words.

Call for Papers Deadline Extension

The Call for Papers for the 2024 ESTS conference has been extended to the 1st June 2024. See below for details:

The nineteenth annual conference of the European Society for Textual Scholarship will take place this year at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, 2-4 October 2024. The Call for Papers can be read below.

CALL FOR PAPERS

Textual scholarship, artificial intelligence, corpora and intelligent editions

The nineteenth annual conference of the European Society for Textual Scholarship (ESTS 2024)

Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest 2-4 October 2024

CfP new deadline 1 June 2024

Although the deep learning-based AI revolution in human language processing began at least a decade ago, the emergence of generative AI through ChatGPT has far exceeded even experts’ expectations. Will AI make textual scholarship and our editing practices smarter? Will we be able to produce intelligent editions, in print or online, without the “help” of computers in the third decade of the 21st century?

In this context, it is worth considering the opportunities and threats of the computer as a cultural artefact in the production of scholarly editions, or in textual scholarship in general, from the Index Thomisticus (Roberto Busa) to Winchester Philology (Thorsten Ries) and the technology of the Semantic Web. The conference also addresses the role of corpora and corpus linguistic methods in the humanities, such as computer-based analysis and annotation of poetic texts.

Papers on the following or related topics are welcome:

  • What is an Intelligent Edition?
  • Who is the (digital) edition for?
  • Can editions become more inclusive?
  • What challenges is textual scholarship facing?
  • Is there a future for print?
  • Textual Scholarship and/as data
  • Editorial Interfacing
  • (Digital) Research Infrastructure and Future-proofing the Edition
  • Editing and Deep Learning
  • Corpus linguistics as Method and Tool
  • Annotation and Commentary in the Age of Google

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to the following:

  • Scholarly editing, textual scholarship and/as research data – in the age of FAIR data management.
  • Versioning, persistent identification, standardization, metadata schemes, data mining, search tools, search platforms. Named entity recognition, data enrichment, linked open data.
  • Scholarly editions on display. Displaying scholarly editions.
  • Arrangement of philological data on the printed surface of paper and on the computer displays, marking-up, sign systems in print and on the screen, relation of the visual arrangement of the source and the edition; lists, glossaries, annotations, marginalia and footnotes: what they disclose and what they hide. Digital interfaces, responsive design and visual stability/instability. Digitizing scholarly editions and printing digital ones.
  • Rule based digital tools, automatic collation, data visualization; intertextuality detection, stylometry and authorship attribution: old and new methods. Deep learning (HTR, LLM), digital research infrastructures.
  • Corpus linguistic methods and tools in poetic research: canonical and non-canonical poetic genres, characteristics of lyrical and narrative poetry (e.g. grammatical and semantic patterns, poetic styles and devices, literary periods), quantitative and qualitative methods.
  • Electronic literature and the challenges of textual scholarship.
  • Born-digital and digitized sources and the challenges of textual scholarship.
  • The audiences of digital and printed editions.

Contributions to the ESTS Conference may take the following forms:

  • Research Papers
    Individual scholars are welcome to submit proposals for papers which may then be selected for
    panels. 20 minutes in length. Please supply an abstract of 150 words (max) + bio of 100 words
    (max).
  • Panel sessions
    We also invite groups of scholars (3 speakers) to submit proposals for thematically linked research paper panels. 90 minutes in length (3 x 20 minute papers + q&a). Please supply 3 abstracts of 150 words (max) each + bios of 100 words (max) for each speaker. The organisers will give preference to panels that reflect the diversity of our field.
  • Roundtable
    We also invite groups of scholars (up to 6 speakers) to submit proposals for thematically linked roundtable sessions. 90 minutes in length (10 mins per speaker + q&a). Please supply an overall abstract of 250 words (250 words) for the roundtable + bios of 100 words (max) for each speaker.
  • Poster sessions
    We will run a poster session as part of the main conference program. Topics of interest include all topics listed above. The poster session is an opportunity for researchers to discuss their early/ongoing work with attendees. The posters presented are to be between sizes A3 and A2; Please provide an abstract of maximum 250 words.

Proposals are to be submitted on the registration link by 15 May 2024.

Proposals are to be reviewed by early June.

Further information

Should you have any questions, feel free to reach out to us at the email address below:
dh-conference@btk.elte.hu

Organisers

The Organising Committee

ESTS – The European Society for Textual Scholarship

ELTE-DH – Department of Digital Humanities, Eötvös Loránd University

ELTE-MIKTI – Institute of Hungarian Literature and Cultural Studies, Eötvös Loránd University

ELTE-DiAGram – Research Group in Stylistics

ESTS 2024 Conference Announcement and CfP

The nineteenth annual conference of the European Society for Textual Scholarship will take place this year at Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, 2-4 October 2024. The Call for Papers can be read below.

CALL FOR PAPERS

Textual scholarship, artificial intelligence, corpora and intelligent editions

The nineteenth annual conference of the European Society for Textual Scholarship (ESTS 2024)

Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest 2-4 October 2024

CfP deadline 1 June 2024

Although the deep learning-based AI revolution in human language processing began at least a decade ago, the emergence of generative AI through ChatGPT has far exceeded even experts’ expectations. Will AI make textual scholarship and our editing practices smarter? Will we be able to produce intelligent editions, in print or online, without the “help” of computers in the third decade of the 21st century?

In this context, it is worth considering the opportunities and threats of the computer as a cultural artefact in the production of scholarly editions, or in textual scholarship in general, from the Index Thomisticus (Roberto Busa) to Winchester Philology (Thorsten Ries) and the technology of the Semantic Web. The conference also addresses the role of corpora and corpus linguistic methods in the humanities, such as computer-based analysis and annotation of poetic texts.

Papers on the following or related topics are welcome:

  • What is an Intelligent Edition?
  • Who is the (digital) edition for?
  • Can editions become more inclusive?
  • What challenges is textual scholarship facing?
  • Is there a future for print?
  • Textual Scholarship and/as data
  • Editorial Interfacing
  • (Digital) Research Infrastructure and Future-proofing the Edition
  • Editing and Deep Learning
  • Corpus linguistics as Method and Tool
  • Annotation and Commentary in the Age of Google

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to the following:

  • Scholarly editing, textual scholarship and/as research data – in the age of FAIR data management.
  • Versioning, persistent identification, standardization, metadata schemes, data mining, search tools, search platforms. Named entity recognition, data enrichment, linked open data.
  • Scholarly editions on display. Displaying scholarly editions.
  • Arrangement of philological data on the printed surface of paper and on the computer displays, marking-up, sign systems in print and on the screen, relation of the visual arrangement of the source and the edition; lists, glossaries, annotations, marginalia and footnotes: what they disclose and what they hide. Digital interfaces, responsive design and visual stability/instability. Digitizing scholarly editions and printing digital ones.
  • Rule based digital tools, automatic collation, data visualization; intertextuality detection, stylometry and authorship attribution: old and new methods. Deep learning (HTR, LLM), digital research infrastructures.
  • Corpus linguistic methods and tools in poetic research: canonical and non-canonical poetic genres, characteristics of lyrical and narrative poetry (e.g. grammatical and semantic patterns, poetic styles and devices, literary periods), quantitative and qualitative methods.
  • Electronic literature and the challenges of textual scholarship.
  • Born-digital and digitized sources and the challenges of textual scholarship.
  • The audiences of digital and printed editions.

Contributions to the ESTS Conference may take the following forms:

  • Research Papers
    Individual scholars are welcome to submit proposals for papers which may then be selected for
    panels. 20 minutes in length. Please supply an abstract of 150 words (max) + bio of 100 words
    (max).
  • Panel sessions
    We also invite groups of scholars (3 speakers) to submit proposals for thematically linked research paper panels. 90 minutes in length (3 x 20 minute papers + q&a). Please supply 3 abstracts of 150 words (max) each + bios of 100 words (max) for each speaker. The organisers will give preference to panels that reflect the diversity of our field.
  • Roundtable
    We also invite groups of scholars (up to 6 speakers) to submit proposals for thematically linked roundtable sessions. 90 minutes in length (10 mins per speaker + q&a). Please supply an overall abstract of 250 words (250 words) for the roundtable + bios of 100 words (max) for each speaker.
  • Poster sessions
    We will run a poster session as part of the main conference program. Topics of interest include all topics listed above. The poster session is an opportunity for researchers to discuss their early/ongoing work with attendees. The posters presented are to be between sizes A3 and A2; Please provide an abstract of maximum 250 words.

Proposals are to be submitted on the registration link by 15 May 2024.

Proposals are to be reviewed by early June.

Further information

Should you have any questions, feel free to reach out to us at the email address below:
dh-conference@btk.elte.hu

Organisers

The Organising Committee

ESTS – The European Society for Textual Scholarship

ELTE-DH – Department of Digital Humanities, Eötvös Loránd University

ELTE-MIKTI – Institute of Hungarian Literature and Cultural Studies, Eötvös Loránd University

ELTE-DiAGram – Research Group in Stylistics

ESTS Conference 2023 – Proposal Deadline Extension

The 18th annual ESTS conference will be taking place at the University of Kent from 13-14 April 2023, and the deadline for proposals has now been extended to Friday 14th October 2022. To read the call for papers, please visit the ESTS 2023 Conference Website, where you’ll also be able to find information on registration, contributions, and where to send abstracts.

Follow the ESTS 2023 Twitter, or join the ESTS Facebook Group for up-to-date announcements and information about the conference.

Variants 15: Call for Submissions

Dear Colleagues,

As the editors of Variants, the Journal of the European Society for Textual Scholarship, we would like to invite you to submit an essay for the fifteenth edition of our journal. Variants is an Open Access journal, published by OpenEdition publishers. The journal will carry the title of our most recent ESTS conference in Málaga: “Textual Scholarship in the 21st Century”, and we especially welcome extended versions of papers that were presented at the conference. But essays outside of the conference are welcome too, on any aspect of textual scholarship such as the theories and practices of (digital) scholarly editing, tool development, genetic criticism, codicology and palaeography, philology, manuscript studies, etc.

Full papers are due by Friday March 13, 2020. If you are interested in submitting an essay, please send an expression of interest by Friday January 10th, that includes a brief description of the essay’s topic (approximately 50 to 100 words) to variants@textualscholarship.eu. If you’re interested in submitting a review, please send an email to rosignoli.stefano@gmail.com by December 31st, motivating the publication of a review on a given edition or monograph on textual scholarship.

For authors who are comfortable writing in LaTeX, we have prepared a template that is available on GitHub (https://github.com/WoutDLN/variantx-for-authors) and as an Overleaf template (https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/submission-template-to-variants-for-authors/znsqffgrvshv). But we accept submissions, in .docx and its open source equivalents as well.

If you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to forward them to us!

We look forward to receiving your submissions,

The Editorial board of Variants,

General Editor, Wout Dillen
Associate Editor, Elli Bleeker
Guest Editor, Laura Esteban Segura
Review Editor, Stefano Rosignoli