Skip to main content

Textual Curation: Authorship, Agency, and Technology in Wikipedia and Chambers’s Cyclopædia: Contents

Textual Curation: Authorship, Agency, and Technology in Wikipedia and Chambers’s Cyclopædia
Contents
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeTextual Curation
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

Show the following:

  • Annotations
  • Resources
Search within:

Adjust appearance:

  • font
    Font style
  • color scheme
  • Margins
table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
  7. Series Editor’s Preface
  8. Acknowledgments
  9. Note on Styles and Conventions
  10. Introduction
    1. Curation
    2. Artifacts
  11. Chapter 1: Distributed Curatorial Practices
    1. Textual Curation and Authorship
    2. Curatorial Authorship
    3. Curation and Invisibility
    4. Rhetorical Agency and Collectives
  12. Chapter 2: Crowdfunding Curation
    1. Networks of Material Support: The Cyclopædia
      1. The Publishers
      2. The Subscribers
    2. Networks of Material Support: Wikipedia
  13. Chapter 3: Metaphors of Curation
    1. Early Modern Metaphors for Intellectual Property Ownership
    2. The Daw and the Honeybee
    3. The Bees in Chambers’ Library
    4. Honeybees and Transformative Authorship
    5. Bees as an Economic Good
    6. Bees and the Ethos of Scientific Enlightenment
    7. Bees and Distributed Labor
    8. The Hive as Commonwealth
    9. The Swarm
  14. Chapter 4: Content Contributors, Vandals, and the Ontology of Curation
    1. Content Contributors to the Cyclopædia
    2. Wikipedia: Content Contributors
    3. Managing Content Contributions
    4. Managing Scope: Deletionism and Inclusionism
    5. Eventualism, Immediatism, and the Compositional Life of Articles
    6. Vandalism
  15. Chapter 5: Production Collectives: Page and Screen
    1. Printed Page as Interface
    2. Dreams of Mechanization
    3. Wikipedian Interfaces, Development, and Curation
  16. Chapter 6: Automated Curation
    1. Historical Context
    2. Bots in Wikipedia
    3. Automated Agency
    4. Identity and Attributed Agency
    5. Bots at Work
  17. Conclusion
  18. Appendix
  19. Notes
  20. Bibliography
  21. Index

Page vii →Contents

  1. List of Illustrations
  2. Series Editor’s Preface
  3. Acknowledgments
  4. Note on Styles and Conventions
  5. Introduction
  6. Chapter 1
  7. Distributed Curatorial Practices
  8. Chapter 2
  9. Crowdfunding Curation
  10. Chapter 3
  11. Metaphors of Curation
  12. Chapter 4
  13. Content Contributors, Vandals, and the Ontology of Curation
  14. Chapter 5
  15. Production Collectives: Page and Screen
  16. Chapter 6
  17. Automated Curation
  18. Conclusion
  19. Appendix
  20. Notes
  21. Bibliography
  22. Index Page viii →

Annotate

Next Chapter
List of Illustrations
PreviousNext
© 2016 University of South Carolina
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org