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Social edition

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A social edition is a form of textual scholarship that utilizes social media like Wikimedia or blogs to create annotated editions of texts. Crompton, Arbuckle and Siemens describe that "Using social media allows us to integrate a new stage into the editorial process — a stage that fills the gap between an edition’s initial planning stages and its concluding blind peer review, which capitalizes on the engaged knowledge communities inside and outside the academy".[1]

List of social editions

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Open participation

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Participation is open to registered and unregistered contributors.

Semi-open participation

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Participation is allowed through a process of review by the project members.

References

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  1. ^ Crompton, Constance; Arbuckle, Alyssa; Siemens, Raymond (2013). "Understanding the Social Edition Through Iterative Implementation: The Case of the Devonshire MS (BL Add MS 17492)". Scholarly and Research Communication. 4 (3). doi:10.22230/src.2013v4n3a118.

Further reading

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  • Bryant, John, The Fluid Text. A Theory of Revision and Editing for Book and Screen. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press 2005 (2002).
  • Shillingsburg, Peter L., From Gutenberg to Google. Electronic Representations of Literary Texts. Cambridge University Press 2006.
  • Siemens, Ray, et al. "Toward modeling the social edition: An approach to understanding the electronic scholarly edition in the context of new and emerging social media." Literary and linguistic computing 27.4 (2012): 445–461. http://web.uvic.ca/~siemens/pub/2011-SocialEdition.pdf
  • Gunter Vasold: Work-in-Progress-Editionen als multidimensionale Wissensräume, in: Digital Diplomatics. The Computer as a Tool for the Diplomatist? Ed. by Antonella Ambrosio, Sébastien Barret, and Georg Vogeler, Köln et al.: Böhlau, 2014 (AfD Beiheft 14). (ISBN 978-3-412-22280-2) (Slides from the presentation at the Digital Diplomatics 2013, Naples 1st Oct. 2014)