Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 14, No. 421. 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: Fri, 27 Oct 2000 09:09:00 +0100 From: Willard McCarty <willard.mccarty@kcl.ac.uk> Subject: hypertext research and the outsider My energetic thanks to Einat Amitay, whose pointers have proven very valuable indeed. The two bibiographic search-engines, The Research Index <http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/> and the Computer Science Research Paper Search Engine <http://www.cora.jprc.com/>, are handy, and the pointers to individuals' collections of their own papers also, esp. Catherine Marshall's and Randy Trigg's; some of the others I'd found already. The strategy for locating free papers I'd worked out for myself and indeed teach much the same to my students -- no more than extensions of tried-and-true methods for sniffing out bibliographic traces. My point was that I'd discovered a sorry state of affairs, and I was making a case for doing something about it. Eventually I'll see to it that a beginner's HIGHLY selective bibliography gets posted somewhere, but meanwhile some observations: (1) As Paul Evan Peters said, welcome to "the dawn of the meso-electronic period... "[A]fter all the appropriate slack has been cut, the best that can be said as far as I am concerned is that we are using crude tools with which we are having some uneven but very real success in fashioning crude but functional electronic artifacts.... To my way of thinking, we are clearly at the end of the period in which cheap stunts, brillant hacks, and acts of ignorance or desperation were the principal ways for creating useful and affordable network resources and services." (Keynote Address, Digital Libraries '94, <http://csdl.tamu.edu/csdl/DL94/peters.keynote.html>. (2) In that spirit I observe that MUCH more than high-powered and well-funded research is required to move beyond those "acts of ignorance or desperation" -- of which my complaint gives example. We need to *communicate* across disciplinary boundaries, not be satisfied with life inside walled compounds. I'm not talking here about developing some kind of common vocabulary or setting up yet another agency or special interest group; we already have the former (as the papers of Randy Trigg, Jim Rosenberg, Catherine Marshall et al. show) and too many of the latter. We simply (or not so simply) need to make our research openly available and organise it so that the intelligent outsider can understand what's happening. For this we do indeed have the tools. Do we have the will? (3) Bridging disciplinary cultures is indeed very difficult. From one perspective my complaint can be seen as the common experience of a person looking in on a discipline in which he has not been trained. It can be very difficult in fact for such a person to recognise that what goes on in the foreign discipline IS scholarship. Thus my difficulty? To someone like me published work is all, whatever the medium, however slowly it happens. Is it the case that in (non-mathematical) CS the software prototypes are primary, the papers actually quite secondary? If so, then is it more than a bit much for me to expect such effort to be put into openly accessible publication as in the humanities? For the sake of argument let's say that we have open access to what is now published in CS hypertext research. Further, let's say that the people in that area heed Randy Trigg's exhortations at <http://www.parc.xerox.com/spl/members/trigg/HT96-keynote/>, as follows: >First, we need to look hard at our own *history* to avoid reinventing old >wheels as well as repeating old errors.... Second, we need to look to >*neighboring fields* like the emerging "Digital Libraries" for >inspiration.... Finally, I suggest that hypermedia has an important >integrative contribution to make to activities like collaboration, >mobilization and volunteering that comprise the under-valued work of >*community-building* taking place on the web. (The explicit emphasis marks are mine, but he does call these exhortations.) Would it then be our job as computing humanists to form the two-way bridge between such an historically self-aware outward-looking discipline on the one hand and the humanities on the other? Comments? Yours, WM
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