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The ‘predatory publishing’ label is often linked to open access in order to discredit it, evoking as this concept does both vanity and self-publishing. Today, however, more and more critical attention is being paid to how this label has been and is still being constructed. On the one hand, the rise of unscrupulous OA publishers who charge aut…[Read more]
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In the 1990s, the Internet offered a horizon from which to imagine what society could become, promising autonomy and self-organization next to redistribution of wealth and collectivized means of production. While the former was in line with the dominant ideology of freedom, the latter ran contrary to the expanding enclosures in capitalist…[Read more]
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That Elsevier/RELX group has now rebranded itself as a “global provider of information and analytics,” seems indicative of the way academic publishing is increasingly moving into the highly pro table data analytics market. Here the linking of journals and scholarly social networks to the data underlying them through article level metrics, cit…[Read more]
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The “transfer of the responsibility of paying for publication to the individual author (or the author’s funding agency or institution)” that is brought about by gold author-pays open access is, as Gary Hall notes in Pirate Philosophy, a “typical neoliberal move.” By placing researchers in a position where they have to compete for the inevitabl…[Read more]
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The Geopolitics of Open addresses issues of difference, ideology and infrastructure across the stratified geographies of open access publishing. It examines the construction of power and inequality in our scholarly practices and discourses around the open. How can we contextualise open access, as a contingent and politically-laden concept, within…[Read more]
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Several projects within the Radical Open Access Collective (including Mattering Press, Goldsmiths Press, the PPJ, and Capacious) frame the work they do around open access publishing as a form of care. Here publishing is understood as a complex, multi-agential, relational practice. In various ways, these projects are concerned with considering how…[Read more]
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This pamphlet explores ways in which to engage scholars to further elaborate the poethics of their scholarship. Following Joan Retallack, who has written extensively about the responsibility that comes with formulating and performing a poetics, which she has captured in her concept of poethics (with an added h), this pamphlet examines what…[Read more]
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Mollie Freier replied to the topic Challenge #2: Networking (6/11-24) in the discussion
Humanities Commons Summer Camp on Humanities Commons 7 years, 7 months agoI’d already joined some groups and followed two people, but I checked out the membership of the groups I’d already joined and added some people to follow. I also found a group on Digital Pedagogy that intrigued me, so I joined that.
The group on Detective Fiction doesn’t have a lot of traffic–people have posted some work, but there didn’t seem…[Read more]
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Mollie Freier started the topic Cozy mysteries in the discussion
Detective Fiction on Humanities Commons 7 years, 7 months agoWhat work are people doing on cozy mysteries?
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Mollie Freier's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 7 years, 7 months ago
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Mollie Freier replied to the topic Challenge #1: Profiles (5/29-6/9) in the discussion
Humanities Commons Summer Camp on Humanities Commons 7 years, 8 months agoHere’s what I have so far: https://hcommons-staging.org/members/mollief/. I’ll probably tinker with it a bit more.
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Mollie Freier's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 7 years, 8 months ago
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Leigh Bonds replied to the topic Challenge #1: Profiles (5/29-6/9) in the discussion
Humanities Commons Summer Camp on Humanities Commons 7 years, 8 months agoLike all of you, I expect to revise what I’ve done thus far as I’m inspired by others’ profiles: https://hcommons-staging.org/members/leighbonds/
Leigh
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Leigh Bonds's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 7 years, 8 months ago
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Leigh Bonds's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 7 years, 8 months ago
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Mollie Freier replied to the topic Welcome! in the discussion
Humanities Commons Summer Camp on Humanities Commons 7 years, 8 months agoMy name is Mollie, and I’m Professor and Head of Public Services in the Olson Library at Northern Michigan University in Marquette, MI (on the south shore of Lake Superior). My academic background includes the M.S, in Library and Information Science, as well as a master’s and Ph. D. in English (all from the University of Illinois at…[Read more]
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Mollie Freier's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months ago
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Elisa Beshero-Bondar deposited Bicentennial Bits and Bytes: The Pittsburgh Digital Frankenstein Project in the group
Textual Scholarship on Humanities Commons 8 years agoSlides accompanying a panel representing the Pittsburgh Bicentennial Frankenstein project to build a digital scholarly variorum edition that updates, bridges, and intersects multiple divergent editions of Frankenstein, including the manuscript notebook drafts of 1816, the 1818, 1823, and 1831 print editions, as well as the handwritten notes in the…[Read more]
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Elisa Beshero-Bondar deposited Bicentennial Bits and Bytes: The Pittsburgh Digital Frankenstein Project in the group
Speculative and Science Fiction on Humanities Commons 8 years agoSlides accompanying a panel representing the Pittsburgh Bicentennial Frankenstein project to build a digital scholarly variorum edition that updates, bridges, and intersects multiple divergent editions of Frankenstein, including the manuscript notebook drafts of 1816, the 1818, 1823, and 1831 print editions, as well as the handwritten notes in the…[Read more]
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Elisa Beshero-Bondar deposited Bicentennial Bits and Bytes: The Pittsburgh Digital Frankenstein Project in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 8 years agoSlides accompanying a panel representing the Pittsburgh Bicentennial Frankenstein project to build a digital scholarly variorum edition that updates, bridges, and intersects multiple divergent editions of Frankenstein, including the manuscript notebook drafts of 1816, the 1818, 1823, and 1831 print editions, as well as the handwritten notes in the…[Read more]
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