What you see here now is simply an early stage along the way toward that network. We’re using the site now to test out some possible future features, such as In Media Res, and to solicit proposals for our initial large-scale projects. But we’re also using the site’s blog to plan in public, to generate conversation about what MediaCommons ought to become.
Our hope is that the interpenetration of the different forms of discourse will not simply shift the locus of publishing from print to screen, but will actually transform what it means to “publish,” allowing the author, the publisher, and the reader all to make the process of such discourse just as visible as its product. In so doing, new communities will be able to get involved in academic discourse, and new processes and products will emerge, leading to new forms of digital scholarship and pedagogy.For this reason, we want our readers and our writers intimately involved in MediaCommons not just after its fuller realization, but in its preliminary stages of development. Get involved in the various conversations around the blog, videos and project proposals. Submit a video yourself, or better yet, a proposal for a larger publishing project. Help us set the agenda for the future of publishing in media studies.
[snip]
More information about the genesis of MediaCommons is available ... :
- Introducing MediaCommons
- MediaCommons 2: Renewed Publics, Revised Pedagogies
- MediaCommons 3: Continuing the discussion
- Initial Responses to MediaCommons
Kathleen Fitzpatrick and Avi Santo, Editors
No comments:
Post a Comment