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E-raamat: Textual Curation: Authorship, Agency, and Technology in Wikipedia and Chambers's Cyclopaedia

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Wikipedia is arguably the most famous collaboratively written text of our time, but few know that nearly three hundred years ago Ephraim Chambers proposed an encyclopedia written by a wide range of contributorsfrom illiterate craftspeople to titled gentry. Chambers wrote that incorporating information submitted by the public would considerably strengthen the second edition of his well-received Cyclopædia, which relied on previously published information. In Textual Curation, Krista Kennedy examines the editing and production histories of the Cyclopædia and Wikipedia, the ramifications of robot-written texts, and the issues of intellectual property theory and credit. Kennedy also documents the evolution of both encyclopedias as well as the participation of central players in discussions about the influence of technology and collaboration in early modern and contemporary culture.

Through this comparative study, based on extensive archival research and data-driven analysis, Kennedy illuminates the deeply situated nature of authorship, which is dependent on cultural approval and stable funding sources as much as it is on original genius and the ownership of intellectual property. Kennedys work significantly revises long-held notions of authorial agency and autonomy, establishing the continuity of new writing projects such as wikis with longstanding authorial practices that she calls textual curation.

This study examines a wide range of texts that recompose accepted knowledge into reliable, complex reference works requires contributions of article text alongside less commonly considered elements such as metadata vocabularies, cross-indexing, and the development of print and digital interfaces. Comparison of analog and networked texts also lays bare the impact of technological developments, both in the composing process and in the topics that can practically be included in such a text. By examining the human and technological curators that support these encyclopedias as well as the discourses that surround them, Kennedy develops textual curation as a longstanding theory and process that offers a nuanced construction of authorship.
List of Illustrations
ix
Series Editor's Preface xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Note on Styles and Conventions xvi
Introduction 1(13)
Chapter 1 Distributed Curatorial Practices
14(22)
Chapter 2 Crowdfunding Curation
36(17)
Chapter 3 Metaphors of Curation
53(18)
Chapter 4 Content Contributors, Vandals, and the Ontology of Curation
71(25)
Chapter 5 Production Collectives: Page and Screen
96(22)
Chapter 6 Automated Curation
118(16)
Conclusion 134(3)
Appendix 137(2)
Notes 139(14)
Bibliography 153(14)
Index 167
Krista Kennedy is an assistant professor of writing and rhetoric at Syracuse University, USA where she teaches courses in the rhetoric of technology, authorship, and technical and professional writing. Her work has appeared in College English and Computers and Composition, and various edited collections.