Scholarship and Scholarly Communication
Dan Cohen, The Social Contract of Scholarly Publishing
David Rieder, Attention, or the Exigence of Excess (response to Cohen, Social Contract)
Jason Baird Jackson, Getting Yourself Out of the Business in Five Easy Steps
Richard S. Lavin, On the Difficulties of Hacking the Academy (response to Getting Yourself Out)
David Parry, Burn the Boats/Books (video), transcript
Dan Cohen, justification behind Digital Humanities now
Mills Kelly, Making Digital Scholarship Count
Tom Scheinfeldt, Thinking the Unthinkable
Larry Cebula, How to Read a Book in One Hour
Chris Kelty, How to Read a (Good) Book in One Hour (nominated by @jasonjackson2)
Jo Guldi, Reinventing the Academic Journal
Alex Juhasz, “Blind” Review: You Can Ask to be Seen!
Alex Juhasz, On Publishing my YouTube “book” on-line
Matthew Wilkens, Critical Text Mining, or Reading Differently
Mark Sample, Loud, Crowded, and Out of Control: A New Model for Scholarly Publishing
Mark Sample, On Hacking and Unpacking My (Zotero) Library
John Unsworth, The Crisis of Audience
Steven Shaviro, Copyright matters (nominated by Jentery Sayers)
David Doria, Creating a Common Research Language
Liliana Loofbourow, Paradise Lost in Word Clouds: What Wordle Says About Milton
Dan Cohen, Open Access Publishing and Scholarly Values
Stephen Ramsay, Open Access Publishing and Scholarly Values (continued)
Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Open Access Publishing and Scholarly Values (part three)
The editors of the journal darkmatter, darkmatter Journal versus Wikipedia: race and the hierarchy of knowledge
Sherman Dorn, An immodest and hopefully obvious proposal for electronic citations
Sherman Dorn, Evil Academic Overlords for Peer-Review Reform
Diane Bowser (?) (@thinkingshop), Open Access Publishing in Philosophy
Tanya Roth, Hacking the Dissertation Process
Anastasia Salter, Rethinking the Humanities Dissertation
David Walbert, Curiosity and the citizen historian
Adam Solove, Digital Publishers Wanted
Jason Baird Jackson, Our Circulatory System (or Folklore Studies Publishing in the Era of Open Access, Corporate Enclosure and the Transformation of Scholarly Societies)
Will Grant, Intimacy and fidelity: situating social media
Mary Churchill, Why Do Academics Write?
Jason Mittell, Why a Book?
Kathleen Fitzpatrick, On Open Access Publishing
Dorothea Salo, I hacked the academy (open access)
Melissa A. Venable, A New Kind of Scholarship?
Tara McPherson, What Color Is Your Scholarship?
Gideon Burton, The Open Scholar
Gideon Burton, Scholarly Communications Must Transform
Toni Prug, Research Threads to replace special issues
Toni Prug, Open-process Academic Publishing
Juan Grigera and Toni Prug, Journal Commons: Open Process Academic Publishing in Practice
Doug Blandy, Interrogating Interpretation
Jeremy Boggs, Why Twitter?
Lee Ann Ghajar, Hacking the Dissertation, Future Tense
Laszlo J. Taba, Cyborg Scholars
Serge Noiret, New portals for new sources and new historians: the European History Primary Sources (EHPS) (PDF)
Bryan Alexander, Academics and social media: a parallel world of open content