Digital Marginalia: Discourse or Gimmick?

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Standard Standard

Digital Marginalia: Discourse or Gimmick? / Skains, Rebecca.
2016. Paper presented at The Future Space of Bookselling Conference, Bangor, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Skains, R 2016, 'Digital Marginalia: Discourse or Gimmick?', Paper presented at The Future Space of Bookselling Conference, Bangor, United Kingdom, 3/06/16 - 4/06/16. <http://prezi.com/75c4bkw64ori/?utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=copy&rc=ex0share>

APA

Skains, R. (2016). Digital Marginalia: Discourse or Gimmick?. Paper presented at The Future Space of Bookselling Conference, Bangor, United Kingdom. http://prezi.com/75c4bkw64ori/?utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=copy&rc=ex0share

CBE

Skains R. 2016. Digital Marginalia: Discourse or Gimmick?. Paper presented at The Future Space of Bookselling Conference, Bangor, United Kingdom.

MLA

Skains, Rebecca Digital Marginalia: Discourse or Gimmick?. The Future Space of Bookselling Conference, 03 Jun 2016, Bangor, United Kingdom, Paper, 2016.

VancouverVancouver

Skains R. Digital Marginalia: Discourse or Gimmick?. 2016. Paper presented at The Future Space of Bookselling Conference, Bangor, United Kingdom.

Author

Skains, Rebecca. / Digital Marginalia : Discourse or Gimmick?. Paper presented at The Future Space of Bookselling Conference, Bangor, United Kingdom.

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Digital Marginalia

T2 - The Future Space of Bookselling Conference

AU - Skains, Rebecca

PY - 2016/6/4

Y1 - 2016/6/4

N2 - Writing in other people’s texts is a centuries-old habit, from monkish scribblings on scripts to student notes in library books. Marginalia has been studied as discourse, as historical documentation, and as evidence of reader response. Recent studies on digital annotation have labeled it “digital social reading”, as readers can share their annotations, and read others’; some authors are experimenting with this function in creative texts. As many academic texts are now available electronically, from online journals to e-books, it seems a natural step to incorporate the interactive functions of the Web 2.0 — comments, annotations, shares, likes, and even new marginalia tools such as ReadSocial, etc. — into a digital discourse occurring on a source text itself. Yet despite scholars’ natural tendencies toward discourse in both print and verbal forms, the practice has not caught on: junior scholars are reluctant to risk their future prospects by disagreeing with a senior academic on the paper itself; mid-career academics have little time to contribute to activities that are not “REF-able”; and much of the interaction that does occur is dominated by scholars who are pushing their own agenda rather than actually engaging. So how can scholars use digital tools for interaction and marginalia to foster discourse, a key element in any research field? This paper explores the experiments that have been tried, in both academic and creative contexts, and propose some options for publishers and authors.

AB - Writing in other people’s texts is a centuries-old habit, from monkish scribblings on scripts to student notes in library books. Marginalia has been studied as discourse, as historical documentation, and as evidence of reader response. Recent studies on digital annotation have labeled it “digital social reading”, as readers can share their annotations, and read others’; some authors are experimenting with this function in creative texts. As many academic texts are now available electronically, from online journals to e-books, it seems a natural step to incorporate the interactive functions of the Web 2.0 — comments, annotations, shares, likes, and even new marginalia tools such as ReadSocial, etc. — into a digital discourse occurring on a source text itself. Yet despite scholars’ natural tendencies toward discourse in both print and verbal forms, the practice has not caught on: junior scholars are reluctant to risk their future prospects by disagreeing with a senior academic on the paper itself; mid-career academics have little time to contribute to activities that are not “REF-able”; and much of the interaction that does occur is dominated by scholars who are pushing their own agenda rather than actually engaging. So how can scholars use digital tools for interaction and marginalia to foster discourse, a key element in any research field? This paper explores the experiments that have been tried, in both academic and creative contexts, and propose some options for publishers and authors.

KW - publishing

KW - academic publishing

KW - open peer review

KW - digital paratexts

M3 - Paper

Y2 - 3 June 2016 through 4 June 2016

ER -