
Digithum reaches its tenth issue and this is worth highlighting given what it means for the consolidation of the project and the confirmation of its relevance and viability. The journal reaches this landmark, which we hope will be the first of many, immersed in a process of continuous improvement that has seen it indexed in the most demanding journal directories. Blind review by two peers in all cases, and the series of formal and management requirements mean that it has been included in the leading indices and is increasingly well respected. [+]


Coordinated by Rubén Comas and Jaume Sureda (UIB)
Plagiarism is a symptom of a crisis in positioning, the tip of the iceberg of the necessary reshaping of the roles of the teaching staff, the students, the library staff and the administrative staff in our universities. Similarly, the various arguments and stances associated with academic plagiarism also point to the relationship between knowledge and society. The collection of articles we have drawn up for this paper tackle academic plagiarism from various standpoints.


Coordinated by Carles Prado-Fonts (UOC)
This dossier contains a series of articles inspired by Edward Said's concept of Orientalism. Together, the articles in the dossier show the importance of Said's contribution and defend the need to continue working to make it even more important and valid, both in the academic context and in terms of the social diffusion it deserves.

DIGITHUM recommends reading the following articles, published in previous issues and related to the dossier.


Academic Cyberplagiarism: Tracing the causes to reach solutions
Vanja Pupovac, Lidija Bilić-Zulle, Mladen Petrovečki
On academic plagiarism in Europe. An analytical approach based on four studies
Jaume Sureda, Rubén Comas, Mercè Morey
Cyberplagiarism webliography. References to academic cyberplagiarism on the internet

The Western Representation of Modern China: Orientalism, Culturalism and Historiographical Criticism
Instrumentalisation of Passions, Social Regulation and Transcendence of Power in the Hanfeizi ![]()
On Monkeys and Japanese: Mimicry and Anastrophe in Orientalist Representation
Against Besieged Literature: Fictions, Obsessions and Globalisations of Chinese Literature

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