Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 14, No. 411. Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London <http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/> <http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/> Date: Wed, 25 Oct 2000 20:06:49 +0100 From: Joel Goldfield <joel@funrsc.fairfield.edu> Subject: Re: 14.0394 self-archiving & online publishing Willard McCarty replied in part my posting as follows: "In regard to Harnad's advocacy of online self-archiving in Humanist 14.0388, my recent experiences in trawling the Web for publications on hyperlinking and related matters come down strongly on his side." I also prefer having more research rather than less. But I hope we see colleagues observing etiquette concerning the linking of their research to that of other's. Publication, with footnotes and the like, formalizes that process. Self-archiving does not, and I have found situations where colleagues who should have notified each other of links to their self-archived, unpublished research did not. It's one thing to mention and describe someone's work, another to link to it. Like Willard, I thik we should encourage self-archiving on the net, for with the various search engines and strategies, more "kindred spirits" will find each other. The "scooping" that Willard refers to may be a valid concern, I believe, when one is working on an article, and the publisher requires that certain core material not have been published elsewhere or if there's a momentous humanities computing discovery in the offing (more power to us!). But many of us seek comments on our work, such as before or after delivering a paper, or just to put the message out there la Vigny. Then the benefits of self-archiving or placing research in an easily found archive sponsored by an umbrella organization are clear. Perhaps more of our professional organizations would be interested in sponsoring such web spaces or archival research space with the appropriate disclaimers, facilitating present and future authors' finding each other amongst the dynamic library's holdings. Regards, Joel Goldfield Fairfield University Fairfield, Connecticut
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