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881 lines
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/ _____/ /__ __/ / /
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/ /__ / / ____ __ __ __ ___ __ __ ____ / /
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/ ___/ __ / / / __ \ / / / / / //__/ / //_ \ / __ \ / /
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/ /____ / /_/ / / /_/ / / /_/ / / / / / / / / /_/ / / /
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\_____/ \____/ \____/ \____/ /_/ /_/ /_/ \__/_/ /_/
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June, 1995 _EJournal_ Volume 5 Number 1 ISSN 1054-1055
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There are 877 lines in this issue.
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An Electronic Journal concerned with the
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implications of electronic networks and texts.
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2928 Subscribers in 37 Countries
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University at Albany, State University of New York
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EJOURNAL@albany.edu
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CONTENTS: [This is line 19]
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STEVAN HARNAD'S "SUBVERSIVE PROPOSAL": [Begins at line 63]
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Kick-Starting Electronic Scholarship
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by Doug Brent,
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University of Calgary
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Editorial Comment [Begins at line 688]
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E-Publishing and Quality Control
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Notice [Begins at line 758]
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Cybernetics in Vienna, April 1996
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Note [Begins at line 769]
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About David Coniam's "Literacy for the
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Next Generation ..." in V2N2
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Information about _EJournal_ - [Begins at line 786]
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About Subscriptions and Back Issues
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About Supplements to Previous Texts
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About _EJournal_
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People [Begins at line 838]
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Board of Advisors
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Consulting Editors
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*************************************************************************
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*****************************************************************
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* This electronic publication and its contents are (c) copyright *
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* 1995 by _EJournal_. Permission is hereby granted to give away *
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* the journal and its contents, but no one may "own" it. Any and *
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* all financial interest is hereby assigned to the acknowledged *
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* authors of individual texts. This notification must accompany *
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* all distribution of _EJournal_. *
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*****************************************************************
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======================================================================
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[ I have managed to connect with the URLs mentioned in this
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issue. Ed.]
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STEVAN HARNAD'S "SUBVERSIVE PROPOSAL": [l. 63]
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Kick-Starting Electronic Scholarship
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A Summary and Analysis
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1. Introduction
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Many readers interested in electronic publishing will know of Stevan
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Harnad, pioneering publisher of _Psycoloquy_, one of the first
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peer-reviewed, all-electronic journals. In numerous talks and
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articles (Harnad 1990; Harnad 1991; Harnad 1992; Harnad 1995a) he
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has argued that electronic publishing is the logical way to cope
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with the spiraling costs and glacial speed of print publication. In
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order to save the entire scholarly industry from collapsing under
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the burden of its own ballooning costs, he urges the scholarly
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community to abandon its current "papyrocentric" attitudes and "take
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to the skies."
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Recently, Harnad precipitated a long, lively, provocative, and only
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occasionally acrimonious electronic discussion among some of the key
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players in the electronic publishing field. (The discussion is
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archived for electronic retrieval at:
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ftp://cogsci.ecs.soton.ac.uk/pub/harnad/Psycoloquy/Subversive.Proposal/
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and is being published as a hardcopy collection edited by Ann
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Okerson and James O'Donnell (see references). He provoked this
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discussion by circulating what he called a "subversive proposal" to
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force the publishing industry to better serve the scholarly
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community. Like most such discussions, this one follows many
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different threads, recycles back into itself, and sometimes almost
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disappears in the tangle of embedded messages and replies typical of
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electronic polylog. But in the course of this convoluted exchange
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the participants explore exhaustively many of the most important
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issues concerning the future of scholarly publishing.
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In the present essay I do not presume to offer a wholly new
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contribution to the debate. Rather, I will first summarize Harnad's
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radical vision for the future of electronic publishing, and then
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present some of the main pro and con arguments from the ensuing
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discussion of this radical vision. I will also summarize some of
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the more interesting side arguments regarding the economics of the
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Internet in general. Finally, I will end with some personal
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analysis of the debate and some observations about electronic
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publishing.
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2. The Subversive Proposal [l. 108]
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As I mentioned above, Harnad and others have long maintained that
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much or all of the future of scholarly publishing lies in
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transferring scholarly research to the internet: what he calls
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"scholarly skywriting." Internet publication not only eliminates
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much of the cost of publishing, but also allows for an extremely
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quick turnaround of articles and responses to them. This quick
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turnaround is, of course, especially important in the sciences,
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where ideas become stale within weeks or even days. But Harnad
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argues for more than timely presentation of ideas. He argues that
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in the electronic world, *presentation* of ideas as lapidary product
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of thought can be replaced by in-process texts that participate in
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the *development* of thought. The process is more akin to oral
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dialogue than to electronic representations of finished texts.
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Absolutely fundamental to Harnad's argument is the distinction
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between what he calls the "trade model" of publishing and "esoteric"
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publishing. "Esoteric" has come to mean "obscure" or "difficult for
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the lay audience to understand," a popular meaning that perhaps
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makes Harnad's choice of terms somewhat unfortunate. However,
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Harnad is fond of presenting the full dictionary definition of the
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term as follows:
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esoteric 213 aj .es-*-'ter-ik
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LL [italic esotericus], fr. Gk [italic es{o-}terikos], fr. [italic
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es{o-}ter{o-}], compar. of [italic eis{o-}], [italic es{o-}] within,
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fr. [italic eis] into, fr. [italic en] in -- more at [mini IN]
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1 a aj designed for or understood by the specially initiated alone
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1 b aj of or relating to knowledge that is restricted to a small group
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2 a aj limited to a small circle <~ pursuits>
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2 b aj [mini PRIVATE], [mini CONFIDENTIAL] <an ~ purpose>
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esoterically 21313 av -i-k(*-)l{e-}
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(Harnad 1995)
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According to this definition, esoteric publishing is obscure to the
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lay audience only as a side-effect of the fact that it is aimed at a
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very small circle of readers. This circle can range from several
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thousand in "mainstream" disciplines to a handful in the more
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specialized sub-subdisciplines of science. Opposed to this form of
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publishing is "trade" publishing, which because it is designed to
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make money has to appeal to a reasonably large audience.
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This has other important implications. Trade publication must
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obviously be protected by copyright; if anyone could copy trade
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works, publishers could not make money. In other words, trade
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publication requires *as an essential condition of its being* that
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access be restricted. This "pay-to-see" model applies even to
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highly subsidized academic journals, which must nonetheless receive
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*some* subscription revenue in order to stay afloat. The costs of
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paper publication require a predictable revenue flow.
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A need for predictable revenue offers little problem for, say,
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established novelists, who want to make money from the sale of their
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books. However, such a model-- where access is by necessity
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*restricted* --is exactly antithetical to scholarly work. Scholars
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are paid by their institutions and by granting agencies in direct
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proportion to their scholarly output and reputation. This in turn
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is closely linked to readership. The more people who read, respond
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to, and build on a scholar's work, the better off she is, not only
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in terms of the intangible satisfaction of having made a difference,
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but also financially. The "consumers" of scholarly publishing, in
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the sense of the people who actually derive benefit from it, are not
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the readers but the writers. [l. 171]
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Scholars have consented to having their works published and sold in
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trade format simply because there was no other way to get their
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ideas in circulation. Harnad repeatedly calls this arrangement a
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"Faustian bargain." This bargain is not necessarily motivated by
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the greed of individual publishers, an allegation that many have
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read into Harnad's comments but which I am convinced is a
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misinterpretation. It is simply a structural constraint of the
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medium. Yet the term "Faustian" certainly suggests that the union
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between scholarly production and a capitalist economy is a
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necessity, not a virtue. As Harnad puts it,
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Both the trade author and the esoteric author had to be
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prepared to make a Faustian bargain with the paper publisher
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(who was not, by the way, the devil either, but likewise a
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victim of the bargain; the only devil would have been the
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Blind Watchmaker who designed our planet and its means of
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publication until the advent of the electronic publication
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era). (Harnad, 1995b)
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Since the demise of monastic scriptoria this relationship has been
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the only game in town.
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Electronic publication obviously provides an alternative to this
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bargain. Yet electronic publication has been slow in coming and
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slower in meeting acceptance. Many on-line journals are nothing
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more than mirrors of paper journals, which continue to be the main
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conduits for academic knowledge and associated academic rewards.
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Trade publishers are obviously in no hurry to move to electronic
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publishing because it is difficult to see how to make any money at
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it. Harnad's "subversive proposal" suggests that scholars not wait
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for the publishing industry to ooze slowly onto the net. Taking his
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cue from Paul Ginsparg's incredibly successful electronic archive
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http://xxx.lanl.gov/
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which reportedly receives 45,000 hits per day (Harnad 1995a; see
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also Stix 1994), Harnad recommends that we leave the publishing
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industry behind and take to the skies ourselves:
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If every esoteric author in the world this very day
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established a globally accessible local ftp archive for every
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piece of esoteric writing he did from this day forward, the
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long-heralded transition from paper publication to purely
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electronic publication (of esoteric research) would follow
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suit almost immediately. (Harnad 1995a) [l. 218]
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This archive would begin with preprints, as Ginsparg's does.
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However, as soon as a work was published in "standard" format,
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authors would replace the preprint version with the published
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version. The trade publication model would immediately become
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untenable for esoteric publication. Publishers would be forced to
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figure out a way to co-operate with scholarly skywriting or abandon
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it altogether, making their profits only by publishing non-scholarly
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works for which there is high demand. Thus scholarly preprints
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would "break down the doors" for fully refereed publication in
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electronic format (e-print.06). Scholars and scholarly electronic
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journals, meanwhile, would be totally supported as they are
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partially supported now, by subsidy rather than by market revenues.
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Others, including _EJournal_, have been championing electronic
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publication for years. What is particularly radical about Harnad's
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proposal is his recommendation of direct action on the part of the
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scholarly community, action that would end the hegemony of the
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publishing industry. In a sense, he has declared war on the
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industry that until now has been the major conduit for academics'
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only "product"-- scholarship.
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3. The Debate about the Proposal
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The long intertwining threads of debate spawned by this proposal can
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be grouped into several categories. Many of the discussions are
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technical in nature, having to do with technical standards,
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centralized versus distributed sites, etc. I will not attempt to
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summarize these issues here. However, I will try to provide a
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sketch of the controversy in four main areas: publishing costs,
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network costs, quality control, and stewardship.
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3.1. Publishing Costs
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An important plank in Harnad's platform is his assertion that
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scholarly writing on the net is cheap enough that it does not
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require a trade model for support. Harnad adamantly insists that
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electronic journals can be produced for 25% of the cost of paper
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journals. Some scholars, such as Lorrin Garson of the American
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Chemical Association, disagree. Garson argues that electronic
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publication will still cost at least 75% of the cost of paper
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publication because only a fraction of the cost of a paper journal
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actually goes into physical reproduction and distribution. The rest
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is "first-copy" cost, which includes the labour of editing, setting
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up tables, proofreading, etc. (Note to Stevan Harnad, vpieg-l, 29
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June 1994).
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[l. 265]
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Harnad defends his figure by pointing out that many of the tools
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needed to set up charts and tables are currently available to
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authors and that authors need no longer pay publishers to do this
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work for them. Powerful public-domain search tools will make other
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services provided by publishers, such as indexing, equally obsolete.
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Quality control, the main remaining cost of publication, is usually
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handled by editors and reviewers who perform their task as part of
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their scholarly mandate, not for immediate financial reward.
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Andrew Odlyzko (appropriately, a mathematician), supports Harnad's
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argument by calculating that, although the average article in
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Mathematics costs about $20,000 to *author* (the total cost of
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supporting a researcher divided by average output of articles), if
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produced electronically it would only cost about $4000 to *publish*
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(e-print.15; see also Odlyzko 1994). By re-engineering the
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publishing enterprise to eliminate many layers of now-unnecessary
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specialists, costs could be brought down far lower, to an estimated
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$400 - $1,000 per article. This cost, Odlyzko claims, would still
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be too high to make pay-per-view a viable option, but it could
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easily be covered by a subsidy model like Harnad's.
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This model also dismisses the much-ballyhooed "copyright" issue as a
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red herring as far as scholarly publishing is concerned. Since
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scholars never expect to get paid directly for their work anyway,
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the ability to protect profit by restricting copying is simply not
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an issue (e-print.09). It only became an issue in scholarly
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publishing because publishers-- not scholars --had to protect their
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financial investment in the paper infrastructure.
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Central to this argument is the distinction between mirroring of
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paper journals and true electronic publishing (like _EJournal_)
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which never sees print at all. Even all-electronic archives are
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frequently no more than warehouses for scanned versions of paper
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copy-- what Ginsparg deprecates as the "scan-and-shred" attitude to
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publishing. Only all-electronic journals have the potential to free
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themselves from the Faustian bargain with publishers.
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3.2. Network Costs
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One argument against the future of all-electronic journals is that
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they are cheap only because the have been getting a free ride on the
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Internet. As more services migrate to the net, and bandwidth
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becomes even more strained than it is now, it may be necessary for
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network providers to charge for carriage (Okerson, who-pays.16; see
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also "Culture Shock"). These charges have the potential to wipe out
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the cost savings of electronic scholarly journals.
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Harnad points out that the Internet has also been giving a free ride
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to "porno-graphics, flaming and trivial pursuit," all of which might
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be looked to as ways of subsidizing the net before looking to
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scholarly publication (e-print.08). But again, the most interesting
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argument comes from a mathematician, Odlyzko.
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[l. 318]
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Since it is impossible to tell the difference between a packet of
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text and a packet of graphics, video or audio data, Internet pricing
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would have to be largely by-the-byte, perhaps with a surcharge for a
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guarantee of no delays to permit applications such as
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videoconferencing to proceed without interruption. By doing some
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"back of an envelope" calculations, he surmises that the average
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scholarly article in markup ASCII would cost something like 1/10,000
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the cost of a one-hour videoconference (who-pays.19). Therefore the
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costs of maintaining and upgrading the physical structure of the net
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would be borne by high-end applications, not scholarly publishing
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(see also MacKie-Mason and Varian).
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3.3. Quality Control
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Probably the biggest problem that electronic scholarly journals face
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is quality control. Despite his optimistic claims for the future of
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electronic publishing, Harnad suggests that the Internet in its
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present state is little more than a "global graffiti board" in which
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unregulated conversation seldom attains the status of scholarship
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(who-pays.03). Other scholars such as Paul Ginsparg claim that this
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may be true of large areas of the net such as Usenet, but that other
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areas, such as his own electronic archive, have maintained high
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scholarly standards. Harnad, however, points out that such
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scholarly enclaves are in an extreme minority. Moreover, preprint
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archives such as Ginsparg's are "parasitic on the refereed paper
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literature for which most of its PREprints are ultimately destined"
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(who-pays.03). In other words, the preprints are generally of good
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quality because they are destined for a paper publication system
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which already has in place a mature and well-organized peer-review
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system.
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This does not mean that a peer-review system cannot migrate to the
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net; in many case it has done so already. Harnad simply points out
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that electronic scholarship has a huge public relations job ahead of
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it if it is going to convince the scholarly world that it can do the
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job as well as paper publishing. A key component of this
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public-relations job will be a coding system that not only tells the
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reader whether an article is peer-reviewed, but also how rigorous
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the peer-review is, thus locating it in a prestige hierarchy similar
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to the one that has long reigned in print (who-pays.03).
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An interesting sidebar to this argument is a proposal that the
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current system of up-front evaluation of articles could be replaced
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by a system that is in many ways more democratic. David Stodolsky
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argues (who-pays.11) that we could abandon peer review altogether if
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we let everyone publish anything and let citation rates be the true
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measure of academic success. Citation-counting, an almost
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impossible job in print, should be relatively easy to automate in
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cyberspace. Harnad dismisses this idea: "I do not believe for a
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minute, even in our absurdly populist age, that a popularity contest
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and box scores can or will replace the systematic scrutiny
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administered by editors and referees (imperfect as that is)."
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(who-pays.13). Nonetheless, Stodolsky raises some interesting
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possibilities occasioned by the powerful bibliometric apparatus
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available on the net.
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3.4. Stewardship [l. 375]
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If scholarship does indeed "take to the skies," who should be in
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charge of publishing and preserving it? Harnad's model takes its
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inspiration from unregulated personal sites such as Ginsparg's
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electronic archive, with the addition of peer review to the brew to
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make public archives less "parasitic on the paper-based review
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process." However, he leaves open the possibility that publishers
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could move to electronic publication in order to avoid being left
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behind, as long as they are prepared to go along with the "new
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order" of open access to knowledge.
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Others are not so sure. Stodolsky, for instance, argues that
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commercial publishers are a lost cause because of their inherent
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conflict of interest, and suggests that there is more potential in
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commercial operators that benefit rather than lose by the move to
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on-line access. One suggestion is smart-card operators who are in
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the business of supplying secure access to data (e-print.12).
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Regardless of who originates the data, the long-term question is who
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will ensure that it remains accessible for the future. This, argues
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Peter Graham, is the traditional job of the librarian, not the
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scholar, the publisher, or the commercial vendor (e-print.12). Bill
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Turner of Cornell Library neatly summarizes many of the most common
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worries in this area: that archives may not be secure, that the data
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may shift or be corrupted, that mistakes will be impossible to
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correct (e-print.17). Harnad retorts that most of these problems,
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especially the difficulty of correcting mistakes, are equally if not
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more characteristic of paper publication (e-print.17). Secure,
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encrypted, off-line archives will ensure the integrity of original
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versions for those who are truly worried about this issue.
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The arguments regarding both the technology and the philosophy of
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long-term storage and accessibility are too complex to summarize
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here, and are in a sense peripheral to the "subversive proposal"
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itself. But archiving is an important piece of the puzzle.
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Libraries promise to have a much more active role in the
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dissemination of knowledge in the electronic universe than in the
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paper universe, particularly if traditional publishers ultimately
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drop out of the equation. (See Frank Quinn's article on this
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subject in _EJournal_ V4N2.)
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4. Analysis and Commentary
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Harnad's optimistic vision of virtually free knowledge on the
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Internet is certainly attractive. His differentiation between
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"trade" and "esoteric" publishing, obvious once stated his way,
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clarifies a distinction often blurred in discussions about
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"products" on the Internet, and his acknowledgement that copyright
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is simply irrelevant in esoteric publication removes a serious red
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herring. Perhaps most important, he has the courage to point out
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that, although publishers have performed an invaluable service to
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scholars for generations, their service lies in dealing with the
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intricacies of preparing and distributing paper. Much of this work
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may simply be irrelevant to electronic scholarship.
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[l. 430]
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Quality control must surely be the most central issue here.
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Considering the incredible pressure to publish, and the amount of
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junk scholarship that finds its way even into existing paper
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publications, and the incredible over-supply of publications that
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defies the most heroic efforts of scholars to keep up with their
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discipline, I am not terribly comfortable with Harnad's optimism
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that quality control mechanisms will *automatically* migrate to the
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net.
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Harold Innis (1951) argues that media have a built-in bias toward
|
|
certain types of social activity. The bias of paper is a function
|
|
of its relative high cost, permanence and slowness (Innis calls it a
|
|
"light" medium only in comparison to stone and clay). The cost of
|
|
paper publication does not in itself ensure quality, but it
|
|
represents a built-in incentive to establish quality control
|
|
mechanisms. When a piece of research appears in print, the reader
|
|
has the assurance of knowing that someone has spent a considerable
|
|
amount of money to get it there and will therefore have taken some
|
|
steps to ensure that it is worth the cost. Not so in electronic
|
|
space.
|
|
|
|
In addition, paper publication provides tangible, object-centered
|
|
quality indicators. Expensively produced, polished-looking journals
|
|
naturally carry a prestige that cheaply produced journals do not,
|
|
for the above reasons. The fact that journals are distinct entities
|
|
in which individual articles are subsumed under a larger series,
|
|
itself an artefact of print publication, also allows certain
|
|
journals to acquire a reputation over time. Electronic publication,
|
|
especially the individually archived preprint, has none of these
|
|
quality-control signals. In other words, the "bias of the medium"
|
|
means that the physical characteristics of print publication carry
|
|
with them some important side benefits which may not migrate to
|
|
electronic space as easily as Harnad assumes.
|
|
|
|
Anyone whose sins have compelled her to function as an editor will
|
|
also know how poorly many scholars edit their own work. Material
|
|
that would be returned unmarked if submitted as an undergraduate
|
|
term paper somehow manages to get sent for publication. An editor
|
|
who is earnest about getting material in print, and is not in charge
|
|
of a journal of such high prestige that she can pick and choose
|
|
freely from a significant oversupply of good manuscripts, must
|
|
labour mightily to extract wheat from chaff. Because the boundary
|
|
between chat forums and scholarly journals has no physical markers
|
|
in cyberspace, the electronic editor must work even harder to
|
|
convince both readers and writers that she is not running a "global
|
|
graffiti board." This is not to say that such tasks are impossible,
|
|
but it is to say that the bias of the medium may make them more
|
|
difficult. If archived preprints do manage to "break down the
|
|
doors" of electronic scholarship and break away from the Faustian
|
|
bargain, the peer-reviewed electronic journals that follow will have
|
|
to labour mightily to establish and keep their reputations without
|
|
the hardcopy signals of quality that we have grown so attached to.
|
|
[l. 483]
|
|
Unfortunately, we can already see signs that the economics of print
|
|
are migrating to the net in ways that blow very cold on the back the
|
|
neck. One electronic journal, the _Electronic Journal of
|
|
Communication_, began as a totally free journal supported by
|
|
whatever academic brownie points its editors and contributors
|
|
accumulated for their labours. However, the Comserve system that
|
|
archives and distributes _EJC_ is now part of CIOS, the
|
|
Communication Institute for Online Scholarship. In order to raise
|
|
money for its activities, CIOS charges for membership, and denies
|
|
full database retrieval privileges to non-members. These charges
|
|
are undoubtedly justified; there is only so much that a free service
|
|
can accomplish on goodwill and public purse. But the effect is that
|
|
_EJC_ is now confined behind exactly the same sort of firewall that
|
|
Harnad denounces as antithetical to esoteric scholarship. Its
|
|
authors are in some ways less accessible than if they published only
|
|
in print journals that their colleagues could read in libraries free
|
|
of charge.
|
|
|
|
Another disturbing trend is the invention of "ecash," a secure
|
|
electronic medium of exchange that obviates the need to transmit
|
|
charge card information over the net (see the Ecash Home Page at
|
|
|
|
http://www.digicash.com/ecash ).
|
|
|
|
Such a mechanism makes perfect sense in the context of classic trade
|
|
models such as mail-order commodities, commercial journals, and
|
|
commercial films, music and the like. The problem is that in its
|
|
present form, ecash doesn't represent "real" money at all. It is
|
|
intended for use as part of a totally on-line economy. You use
|
|
ecash to buy access to on-line information that has been placed in
|
|
electronic "shopping malls." If you run out of ecash, the only way
|
|
to get more is to post some information that you hope others will
|
|
find useful enough to buy.
|
|
|
|
The system has not had, and probably will not have, any influence on
|
|
electronic scholarship. In fact, commercial transactions on the Net
|
|
are undoubtedly necessary in order to pay for the infrastructure and
|
|
ensure that scholarship can still get a free, or cheap, ride. But
|
|
it is nonetheless disturbing to see the development of a powerful
|
|
incentive to sell what has traditionally been posted free. Since
|
|
information is the main "product" of the Net, there is an incentive
|
|
for this market economy to migrate from a trade in sex toys to
|
|
a trade in knowledge. I don't disparage everything about capitalism,
|
|
but I have to admit that it has been refreshing to work in a medium
|
|
which has until recently been free of market forces by virtue of its
|
|
technological structure.
|
|
|
|
Where is all of this heading? Of course we really have no idea, any
|
|
more than Gutenberg did when he began his work. What is clear is
|
|
that economics and technology have a very uneasy relationship. We
|
|
have depended on an economically driven reward system for the
|
|
distribution of our ideas ever since the printing press made the
|
|
tribally subsidized bard obsolete. It is not at all clear whether
|
|
the Internet, rapidly turning into the "Information Highway"
|
|
complete with toll booths and fast-food restaurants, will be able to
|
|
reverse this dependency. Harnad's image of the "Faustian bargain"
|
|
for the soul of academic knowledge is more apt than I like to think.
|
|
[l. 541]
|
|
Probably the most important lesson of Harnad's work is that
|
|
cyberspace is a medium inherently different from print, and that
|
|
current "papyrocentric" models (one of Harnad's most felicitous
|
|
terms) are likely to be very short on vision. One is reminded of
|
|
the incunabula period of the book trade, during which books were
|
|
printed to look as much like manuscripts as possible, and the Abbot
|
|
of Sponheim urged monks to keep copying manuscripts by hand both to
|
|
encourage diligence and devotion and to circumvent the
|
|
"impermanence" of printed publication on paper (Eisenstein 1979:
|
|
14). We must remember that esoteric publication has had its crises
|
|
of distribution and quality control before, and that some of the
|
|
solutions to these crises-- including the Faustian bargain with the
|
|
for-profit publication industry --were totally unimaginable by those
|
|
at the centre of the shift. Media, knowledge and money have
|
|
performed an intricate dance for many hundreds of years, and we can
|
|
be certain that, whatever form the dance takes next, all three
|
|
partners will be involved.
|
|
|
|
[ Thanks to Stevan Harnad, Paul Ginsparg and Andy Odlyzko for their
|
|
correspondence and clarifications. ]
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
The bulk of Harnad's work is archived at
|
|
|
|
ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/Harnad
|
|
and at
|
|
http://www.princeton.edu/~Harnad.
|
|
|
|
This includes major articles, including those cited below, and most
|
|
of the archived discussion on the "subversive proposal." The latter
|
|
is contained in two sets of files whose filenames begin either
|
|
"e-print" or "who-pays." These may be found at
|
|
|
|
ftp://ftp.princeton.edu/pub/harnad/Psycoloquy/Subversive.Proposal
|
|
|
|
See also the later exchange between Harnad and Steve Fuller,
|
|
referenced below as Harnad, S. (1995b).
|
|
|
|
[ Another place to start looking for most of the texts related to
|
|
this issue is in the regularly refreshed Hyperjournal Web area of
|
|
Goldsmiths' College server:
|
|
|
|
http://www.gold.ac.uk/ Ed.]
|
|
|
|
--------- ---------- ---------- ----------
|
|
|
|
REFERENCES: [l. 588]
|
|
|
|
"Culture Shock on the Networks," _Science_ August 12, 1994: 879 -
|
|
81.
|
|
|
|
Eisenstein, E. (1979) _The Printing Press as an Agent of Change._
|
|
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
|
|
|
|
Harnad, S. (1990) Scholarly Skywriting and the Prepublication
|
|
Continuum of Scientific Inquiry. _Psychological Science_ 1: 342 -
|
|
343 (reprinted in Current Contents 45: 9-13, November 11 1991).
|
|
|
|
ftp://cogsci.ecs.soton.ac.uk/pub/harnad/Harnad/harnad90.skywriting/
|
|
|
|
|
|
Harnad, S. (1991) Post-Gutenberg Galaxy: The Fourth Revolution in
|
|
the Means of Production of Knowledge. _Public-Access Computer
|
|
Systems Review_ 2 (1): 39 - 53 (also reprinted in _PACS Annual
|
|
Review_ Volume 2 1992; and in R. D. Mason (ed.) _Computer
|
|
Conferencing: The Last Word_. Beach Holme Publishers, 1992; and in:
|
|
M. Strangelove & D. Kovacs: _Directory of Electronic Journals,
|
|
Newsletters, and Academic Discussion Lists_ [A. Okerson, ed], 2nd
|
|
edition. Washington, DC, Association of Research Libraries, Office
|
|
of Scientific & Academic Publishing, 1992).
|
|
|
|
ftp://cogsci.ecs.soton.ac.uk/pub/harnad/Harnad/harnad91.postgutenberg/
|
|
|
|
|
|
Harnad, S. (1992) Interactive Publication: Extending the American
|
|
Physical Society's Discipline-Specific Model for Electronic
|
|
Publishing. _Serials Review_, Special Issue on Economics Models for
|
|
Electronic Publishing, pp. 58 - 61.
|
|
|
|
ftp://cogsci.ecs.soton.ac.uk/pub/harnad/Harnad/harnad92.interactivpub/
|
|
|
|
|
|
Harnad, S. (1995a) Implementing Peer Review on the Net: Scientific
|
|
Quality Control in Scholarly Electronic Journals. In: Peek, R. &
|
|
Newby, G. (Eds.) _Electronic Publishing Confronts Academia: The
|
|
Agenda for the Year 2000_. Cambridge MA: MIT Press.
|
|
|
|
ftp://cogsci.ecs.soton.ac.uk/pub/harnad/Harnad/harnad95.peer.review/
|
|
|
|
|
|
Harnad, S. (1995b) Electronic Scholarly Publication: Quo Vadis.
|
|
_Serials Review_ 21(1), pp. 70-72 1995.
|
|
|
|
http://cogsci.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Harnad/harnad95.quo.vadis/
|
|
|
|
|
|
Abridged version in _Times Higher Education Supplement_ 12 May 1995.
|
|
|
|
Innis, H. (1951) _The Bias of Communication_. Toronto: Toronto
|
|
University Press.
|
|
|
|
MacKie-Mason, J.K. and H. R. Varian, Some economics of the Internet,
|
|
in _Networks, Infrastructure and the New Task for Regulation_, W.
|
|
Sichel, ed., to appear. (Available via gopher or ftp together with
|
|
other related papers from
|
|
|
|
gopher.econ.lsa.umich.edu in /pub/Papers.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Odlyzko, A, (1994) Tragic loss or good riddance? The impending
|
|
demise of traditional scholarly journals. _Intern. J. Human-Computer
|
|
Studies_ (formerly _Intern. J. Man-Machine Studies_) 41 (1995), in
|
|
press. Available via e-mail [the ftp file is compressed. Ed.]
|
|
|
|
msg: send tragic.loss from att/math/odlyzko
|
|
to : netlib@research.att.com
|
|
or from
|
|
ftp://netlib.att.com/netlib/att/math/odlyzko/tragic.loss.Z (WWW)
|
|
netlib.att.com netlib/att/math/odlyzko/tragic.loss.Z (anonymous FTP)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Okerson, A. and J. O'Donnell. (1995) _Scholarly Journals at the
|
|
Crossroads; A Subversive Proposal for Electronic Publishing_.
|
|
Washington, DC., Association of Research Libraries.
|
|
|
|
Quinn, F. (1994) A role for libraries in electronic publication.
|
|
_EJournal_ V4N2, ll. 68 - 416.
|
|
|
|
Stix, G. (1994) The speed of write. _Scientific American_,
|
|
271(6),December. 106 - 111.
|
|
|
|
|
|
by Doug Brent dabrent@acs.ucalgary.ca
|
|
University of Calgary
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
[ This essay in Volume 5 Number 1 of _EJournal_ (June, 1995) is (c)
|
|
copyright 1995 by _EJournal_. Permission is hereby granted to give
|
|
it away. _EJournal_ assigns any and all financial interest to Doug
|
|
Brent. This note must accompany all copies of this text. ]
|
|
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
EDITORIAL COMMENT [l. 687]
|
|
E-PUBLISHING AND QUALITY CONTROL
|
|
|
|
It looks as if two facile assumptions-- that e-publishing is
|
|
(merely) expedient and that (only) paper publishing is permanent--
|
|
will fade gradually during the transition to paperless publishing of
|
|
"esoteric" texts. That's fine. All in good time. Meanwhile and
|
|
beyond, though, worries about maintaining standards will continue.
|
|
|
|
One big worry is that unreviewed self-publication is so easy on the
|
|
net that we'll be overwhelmed with junk. Not to worry; academics
|
|
will will seek and find someone to filter the junk for them.
|
|
Junk-detectors can establish reputations as easily in e-space as in
|
|
the paper-bound world.
|
|
|
|
A second worry, less often heard, is that the ease and speed of peer
|
|
review in e-space might stifle discovery. Originality could be
|
|
suffocated by the volume of complaints from establishmentarians;
|
|
accommodating all objections could lead to bland committee reports
|
|
instead of unequivocal declarations. Again, that worry fades when
|
|
seen as a procedural, not a medium-related, concern.
|
|
|
|
A third quality-control concern is usually associated with
|
|
narrowness of specialization. Some cynics think that a cadre of
|
|
sub-sub-specialists within a discipline can easily promote each
|
|
others' careers by just starting a journal, publishing their
|
|
buddies' work, and arguing that no one else is qualified to find
|
|
fault with what *they* agree is good work. Unless one knows how
|
|
much money and effort it takes to start a journal, the whole
|
|
process-- including peer review -- can look like a mutual-promotion
|
|
collaboration.
|
|
|
|
Here's where the medium makes a big difference. Finding specialists
|
|
to collaborate with is easier through e-mail than on paper. And
|
|
"starting a journal" on the net, although not effortless, is
|
|
inxpensive. Most telling: In circumstances where some colleagues
|
|
feel left out of the loop-- they don't read texts on a screen --the
|
|
intellectual integrity of an electronic journal is questionable by
|
|
default. (A printout doesn't look "published.")
|
|
|
|
In such a context, this current issue of _EJournal_ looks especially
|
|
suspicious. It consists of an assessment of Stevan Harnad's
|
|
"Subversive Proposal" and the follow-up exchanges. Stevan is a
|
|
member of our Advisory Board. The author, Doug Brent, is one of our
|
|
Consulting Editors, and a frequent contributor. Ann Okerson,
|
|
another member of the Board, has co-edited a collection of the same
|
|
texts. Have we conspired to promote each other, or a point of
|
|
view? No. But the problem, the perception problem, the medium-related
|
|
problem, is real. Electronic journals cannot dismiss this vector of
|
|
skepticism about their legitimacy with an easy retort about how "the
|
|
issues are the same in any medium."
|
|
|
|
About _EJournal_ V5N1: I asked Doug Brent to summarize and review
|
|
the "Subversive Proposal" archive last winter. The editorial
|
|
process was anonymous; the reviewers did not know who had written
|
|
the essay, nor that I had asked for it. After reading it, they did
|
|
have some reservations, but recommended publication without dissent.
|
|
I didn't know at that point that Ann Okerson was working on a
|
|
paper-based collection of the discussion.
|
|
|
|
Believers in electronic delivery of academic texts cannot shrug off
|
|
the understandable reservations some colleagues will have about
|
|
quality. Louder and louder explanations of how wonderful we are
|
|
won't help; the default skepticism will disappear only with
|
|
generational succession. Meanwhile, sound procedures and
|
|
self-conscious attention to integrity are crucial to earning our
|
|
colleagues' respect. And doing some good things that paper-based
|
|
journals don't do-- as Stevan Harnad and Paul Ginsparg are doing
|
|
-- won't hurt at all.
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
NOTICE: Cybernetics in Vienna, April 1996 [l. 758]
|
|
|
|
A Symposium called "Theories and Metaphors of Cyberspace" is
|
|
being organized by the Principia Cybernetica Project at the
|
|
Cybernetics and Systems Research Meeting.
|
|
The Symposium URL is:
|
|
|
|
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/cybspasy.html
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
NOTE: [l. 769]
|
|
|
|
Readers interested in the development of children's writing- seeing-
|
|
hearing- reading abilities may remember David Coniam's essay
|
|
"Literacy for the Next Generation: Writing Without Handwriting" in
|
|
_EJournal_ V2N2 (June, 1992). Software that looks adaptable for
|
|
what he advocates-- letting young people enjoy hearing sounds made
|
|
when keys and key-combinations are struck --is reviewed in
|
|
_Computers and the Humanities_ V28N6 (1994-95), 409-412:
|
|
"TalkingKeyPro: Digital Speech for the Macintosh," by Helen E. Karn.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
------------------------ I N F O R M A T I O N --------------------
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
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|
|
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About "Supplements":
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|
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_EJournal_ continues to experiment with ways of revising, responding
|
|
to, reworking, or even retracting the texts we publish. Authors who
|
|
want to address a subject already broached --by others or by
|
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themselves-- may send texts for us to consider publishing as a
|
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Supplement issue. Proposed supplements will not go through as
|
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thorough an editorial review process as the essays they annotate.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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|
|
About _EJournal_:
|
|
|
|
_EJournal_ is an all-electronic, e-mail delivered, peer-reviewed,
|
|
academic periodical. We are particularly interested in theory and
|
|
practice surrounding the creation, transmission, storage,
|
|
interpretation, alteration and replication of electronic "text" -
|
|
including "display" - broadly defined. We are also interested in
|
|
the broader social, psychological, literary, economic and
|
|
pedagogical implications of computer-mediated networks. The
|
|
journal's essays are delivered free to Internet addressees.
|
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Recipients may make paper copies; _EJournal_ will provide
|
|
authenticated paper copy from our read-only archive if needed by
|
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academic deans or others.
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|
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Writers who think their texts might be appreciated by _EJournal_'s
|
|
audience are invited to forward files to EJOURNAL@ALBANY.edu If you
|
|
are wondering about starting to write a piece for to us, feel free
|
|
to ask if it sounds appropriate. There are no "styling" guidelines;
|
|
we try to be a little more direct and lively than many paper
|
|
publications, and considerably less hasty and ephemeral than most
|
|
postings to unreviewed electronic spaces. Essays in the vicinity of
|
|
5000 words fit our format well. We read ASCII; we look forward to
|
|
experimenting with other transmission and display formats and
|
|
protocols.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
-
|
|
Board of Advisors:
|
|
Stevan Harnad University of Southampton
|
|
Dick Lanham University of California at Los Angeles
|
|
Ann Okerson Association of Research Libraries
|
|
Joe Raben City University of New York
|
|
Bob Scholes Brown University
|
|
Harry Whitaker University of Quebec at Montreal
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
-
|
|
Consulting Editors - June, 1995
|
|
|
|
ahrens@alpha.hanover.edu John Ahrens Hanover
|
|
srlclark@liverpool.ac.uk Stephen Clark Liverpool
|
|
dabrent@acs.ucalgary.ca Doug Brent Calgary
|
|
djb85@albany Don Byrd Albany
|
|
donaldson@loyvax Randall Donaldson Loyola College
|
|
erdtt@pucal Terry Erdt Purdue-Calumet
|
|
gms@psuvm Gerry Santoro Penn State
|
|
kahnas@vax1.acs.jmu.edu Arnie Kahn James Madison
|
|
nakaplan@ubmail.ubalt.edu Nancy Kaplan Baltimore
|
|
nrcgsh@ritvax Norm Coombs RIT
|
|
r0731@csuohio Nelson Pole Cleveland State
|
|
richardj@bond.edu.au Joanna Richardson Bond
|
|
ryle@urvax Martin Ryle Richmond
|
|
twbatson@gallua Trent Batson Gallaudet
|
|
userlcbk@umichum Bill Condon Michigan
|
|
wcooper@vm.ucs.ualberta.ca Wes Cooper Alberta
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Editor: Ted Jennings, emeritus, University at Albany
|
|
Assistant Editor: Chris Funkhouser, University at Albany
|
|
Technical Associate: Jennifer Wyman, University at Albany
|
|
Editorial Asssociate: Jerry Hanley, emeritus, University at Albany
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Department of English
|
|
and
|
|
Computing and Network Services
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY 12222 USA
|
|
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