DH Text Submission Guidelines This is the template for the annual Digital Humanities conference of the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO). Please read and follow the following informations thoroughly in order to facilitate the conversion to TEI for the edition of the Conference Proceedings. The template consists of sections with light grey background like the one you are reading right now that cannot be edited and will be processed automatically during the TEI-conversion. For the other sections please use only the paragraph styles provided by this templates named „DH-[Stylename]“: DH-Default DH-Subtitle DH-Heading1 DH-Heading2 DH-Heading3 DH-Quotation In addition we support images, links, lists and tables and the following character level styles: Bold Italics Underlined On page three you will find the three editable main sections of this document: 1. Subtitle section for an optional subtitle 2. Body sections for the chapters of your paper 3. References section for the bibliographic references. Please follow the additional indications for the typescripting: Notes should be used only for comments, not for simple bibliographic citations. Bibliographic references should be made inline and the works cited should be listed in a section at the end of the article headed "References". The list should be in alphabetical order by author. Where an author has more than one publication, they should be arranged in chronological order, and if there is more than one publication within a year, they should be alphabetically ordered by title and labelled a, b, etc. (e.g. 1989a, 1989b). Single-author works precede co-authored works. Please follow the examples given below for bibliographic layout. Quotations with a minimum of 5 lines of type should be in in DH-Quotation format small type, set full left. For short quotations within the text single quotation marks should be used. Double quotation marks should be used for quotes within quotes. Program code should appear as images or formulae. References and Bibliography Please use the version of the Harvard system described below. References should be cited in the text using the author's name and year of publication, e.g. (Bloggs, 1990; Bloggs et al., 1991). The list of references should be headed References and placed at the end of the s ubmission . It should be in alphabetical order. Where an author has more than one publication, they should be arranged in chronological order, and if there is more than one publication within a year, they should be alphabetically ordered by title and labelled a, b, etc. (e.g. 1989a, 1989b). Single-author works precede co-authored works. If citing an electronic publication, please supply the full URL and a date accessed. Please follow the examples given below for bibliographic layout. Biber, D. (1988). Variation Across Speech and Writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Calzolari, N. (1989). A typology of English text. In Batori, I. S., Lenders, W. and Putschke, W. (eds), Computational Linguistics. New York: ACM Press, pp. 510-19. Ellis, D. (1987). The Derivation of a Behavioural Model for Information Retrieval Design. Ph.D. thesis, University of Sheffield. Halliday, M. A. K. (1985). An Introduction to Functional Grammar. Edward Arnold, London. Oostdijk, N. (1988). A corpus linguistic approach to linguistic variation. Literary and Linguistic Computing, 3: 12- 25.