User contributions for Wtrettien
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11 November 2022
- 02:0802:08, 11 November 2022 diff hist +6,980 Caswell →3 From Representation to Activation
- 02:0802:08, 11 November 2022 diff hist +5,785 Caswell →2 Community Archives Interrupting Time
- 00:5500:55, 11 November 2022 diff hist +202 Caswell No edit summary
- 00:5200:52, 11 November 2022 diff hist +45,434 N Marino 2020 Created page with "Mark Marino, ''Critical Codes Studies'' (MIT Press, 2020) == introduction == In 2009, leaked emails from the Climate Research Unit (CRU) of England’s Univer- sity of East Anglia seemed to hand a smoking gun to climate change deniers, proof positive that climate change is a fabrication. These emails included code used to model climate change, and the comments in that code seemed to indicate a manipulation of the… Page 1 …this code was not written as the final w..." current
- 00:4600:46, 11 November 2022 diff hist +140 Main Page →Critical Code Studies
- 00:4600:46, 11 November 2022 diff hist −140 Main Page →Digital Humanities
- 00:4500:45, 11 November 2022 diff hist +288 Main Page →Critical Algorithm Studies / Surveillance Studies
- 00:4400:44, 11 November 2022 diff hist −151 Main Page →Media / Digital Book Studies
10 November 2022
- 17:5717:57, 10 November 2022 diff hist +22,324 N Soon and Cox 2020 Created page with "Soon, Winnie and Geoff Cox. ''Aesthetic Programming: A Handbook of Software Studies.'' Open Humanities Press, 2020 https://aesthetic-programming.net/ …o offer critical reflection upon the practice of coding alone, instead it offers something more messy and at the same time more “useful” we would say: a book about the more complex and deeply entangled set of relations between writing, coding and thinking. Page 15 …etween available literature and the growing in..." current
- 17:5617:56, 10 November 2022 diff hist +140 Main Page →Digital Humanities
- 17:1417:14, 10 November 2022 diff hist +71,431 N Chun 2021 Created page with "Chun, Wendy. ''Discriminating Data.'' 2021 == Introduction : how to destroy the world, one solution at a time == Hopeful ignorance is not the s tion but the problem: it perpetuates discrimination and inequality, one solution at a time. The problem is not that giant technology monopolies have disrupted habits, institutions, and norms in order to create new, unforeseen futures. The problem is that, in the name of “creative disrup- tion,” they are amplifying and auto..." current
- 17:0917:09, 10 November 2022 diff hist +152 Main Page →Media / Digital Book Studies
2 November 2022
- 19:1619:16, 2 November 2022 diff hist +91 Digital Humanities graduate seminar No edit summary current
- 19:1319:13, 2 November 2022 diff hist +61 Digital Humanities graduate seminar No edit summary
- 16:5816:58, 2 November 2022 diff hist +128 Digital Humanities graduate seminar No edit summary
- 14:0614:06, 2 November 2022 diff hist +72 Charles Babbage No edit summary
- 14:0614:06, 2 November 2022 diff hist +200 Charles Babbage No edit summary
31 October 2022
- 00:0300:03, 31 October 2022 diff hist +18,664 N Nakamura et al. 2021 Created page with "Nakamura, Lisa, Hanah Stiverson, and Kyle Lindsey. ''Racist Zoombombing.'' New York: Routledge, 2021. Introduction We argue that the racism and misogyny that characterizes zoombomb- ing is the same racism and misogyny that the Internet has trafficked in from its origin. Zoombombing differs from more benign kinds of trolling such as DDOS (distributed denial of service) attacks be- cause it has intimate ties and critical engagements with the growth of the far-right, the..." current
- 00:0200:02, 31 October 2022 diff hist +129 Main Page →Media / Digital Book Studies
27 October 2022
- 21:5921:59, 27 October 2022 diff hist +4,335 N Blackmon 2009 Created page with "Blackmon, Douglas. ''Slavery by Another Name: The Re-enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II.'' New York: Random House, 2009. “A provocative question: What would be revealed if American corporations were examined through the same sharp lens of historical confrontation as the one then being trained on German corporations that relied on Jewish slave labor during World War II and the Swiss banks that robbed victims of the Holocaust of their fort..." current
- 21:5821:58, 27 October 2022 diff hist +172 Main Page →Prison History / Prison Labor
- 21:5621:56, 27 October 2022 diff hist +66,078 Manion 2015 No edit summary current
- 15:2515:25, 27 October 2022 diff hist −1 Main Page →Media / Digital Book Studies
- 15:2415:24, 27 October 2022 diff hist +17 Penal Press No edit summary
- 15:2415:24, 27 October 2022 diff hist +126 N Manion 2015 Created page with "Manion, Jen. ''Liberty's Prisoners: Carceral Culture in Early America.'' Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015."
- 15:2215:22, 27 October 2022 diff hist +185 Main Page →History of Computing
23 October 2022
- 18:4518:45, 23 October 2022 diff hist +117 N Warren 2022 Created page with "Warren, Michelle. ''Holy Digital Grail: A Medieval Book on the Internet.'' Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2022."
- 18:4018:40, 23 October 2022 diff hist +136 Main Page →Media / Digital Book Studies
- 18:3818:38, 23 October 2022 diff hist +26,741 N Caswell Created page with "Michelle Caswell, ''Urgent Archives'' (2021) == intro == Many scholars used to think of the time between 1946, when the Luce- Cellar Act imposed a restrictive 100-person-a-year quota on Indian immigration, and 1965, when the US Immigration Act was passed, repealing the quota, as being a kind of dead space for the community, with little cultural and political activity.3 This film is evidence of a largely unknown continuity of South Asian American stories… Page 1 Wha..."
- 18:3318:33, 23 October 2022 diff hist +6,848 N Drabinski 2013 Created page with "Drabinski, "Queering the Catalog" L ibraries are spaces where language really matters. 2 than US users did: while “Kafirs” is simply descriptive in the US context to US catalogers, it was virulently racist in Zambia ð Gilyard 1999, 3 Þ . 3 The idea that language has meaning only in context, an idea articulated abstractly in fields like philosophy, comparative literature, and anthropology, was made very materially evident: subject headings, often cast by cat..." current
- 18:3318:33, 23 October 2022 diff hist −1 Main Page →Libraries / Library Tech
- 18:3218:32, 23 October 2022 diff hist +278 Main Page →Libraries / Library Tech
- 18:2718:27, 23 October 2022 diff hist +7,923 N Nakamura 2008 Created page with "Nakamura, ''Digitizing Race'' (2008) This historical moment intersected with the inception of the Inter- net as a mass technology in the United States. Page 3 … The language of tolerance, or of disavowing racism by simply omitting all language referring to race, functioned to perpetuate digital inequality by both concrete and symbolic means. A visual culture of digital racial formation must take both of these aspects of relatedness to the Internet into account… P..." current
- 18:2618:26, 23 October 2022 diff hist +3,112 N Nakamura 2002 Created page with "Lisa Nakamura, Cybertypes (2002) …the Internet is a place where race happens; even in the absence of users of color, images of race and racialism prolifer- ate in cyberspace. The ideological uses to which race is put in this medium must be examined before we can even begin to consider cy- berspace's promise as a democratic and progressive medium… Page 2 Rather than adopting a utopian or pessimistic view in which the Internet is viewed as either a vector for progre..." current
- 18:2618:26, 23 October 2022 diff hist +266 Main Page →Media / Digital Book Studies
9 September 2022
- 17:1617:16, 9 September 2022 diff hist +4 Adler 2019 No edit summary current
- 17:1617:16, 9 September 2022 diff hist +3,699 N Adler 2019 Created page with "Adler, Melissa. "Eros in the Library: Considering the Aesthetics of Knowledge Organization." ARLIS (2019): 67-71. I am convinced that dismantling systems that support patriarchy requires not simply updating, revising, or adding to them, but inhabiting and re-inscribing spaces using techniques and language from outside of those systems. This involves taking the idea of a maker-space/incubator into the entire library, into the stacks themselves to work intimately with the..."
- 17:1517:15, 9 September 2022 diff hist +135 Main Page →Libraries / Library Tech
2 September 2022
- 18:4418:44, 2 September 2022 diff hist +138 Digital Lives of Books No edit summary current
1 August 2022
- 01:0201:02, 1 August 2022 diff hist +177 Cultures of the Book No edit summary current
29 July 2022
- 16:5516:55, 29 July 2022 diff hist +3,404 Peltz 2017 →Introduction: A Long History of Extra Illustration current
- 16:0816:08, 29 July 2022 diff hist +4,950 N Peltz 2017 Created page with "Peltz, Lucy. ''Facing the Text: Extra-Illustration, Print Culture, and Society in Britain 1769-1840.'' San Marino, CA: Huntington Library, 2017. == Introduction: A Long History of Extra Illustration == Bowyer Bible, 7000 prints in 45 folio volumes, bound and preserved in a custom-made case Robert Bowyer was a publisher, operated the Historic Gallery at Schomberg House between 1792 and 1806 -- exhibiting paintings cementing "British culture" and history, reproduced in..."
- 15:4115:41, 29 July 2022 diff hist +162 Main Page →History of Reading / Compiling / Arranging
27 July 2022
- 17:3417:34, 27 July 2022 diff hist 0 Main Page No edit summary
- 17:3417:34, 27 July 2022 diff hist 0 Silver and Hamel 2005 No edit summary current
26 July 2022
- 13:3813:38, 26 July 2022 diff hist +395 Silver and Hamel 2005 No edit summary
25 July 2022
- 22:3322:33, 25 July 2022 diff hist +3,664 N Silver and Hamel 2005 Created page with "Silver, Joel and Christepher de Hamel. ''Dispound and Dispersed: The Leaf Book Considered.'' The Caxton Club, 2005. == Christopher de Hamel, "The Leaf Book" (6-23) == "There are two themes in the prehistory of leaf books. The first is the practice of cutting up one book so that its pieces might be used to ornament or improve another book. The second is relic collecting. Both practices go back into the Middle Ages." (6) first leaf book: Francis Fry, A Description of th..."
- 18:2818:28, 25 July 2022 diff hist +144 Main Page →History of Reading / Compiling / Arranging
19 July 2022
- 20:4320:43, 19 July 2022 diff hist +82 Books of Scraps No edit summary current
- 15:4115:41, 19 July 2022 diff hist +54,449 N Silverman 2008 Created page with "Willa Z. Silverman, ''The New Bibliopolis: French Book Collectors and the Culture of Print, 1880-1914.'' Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2008. Twenty-five years later, in 1894, another notable book collection was brought to the block at the Hôtel Drouot, this one featuring not livres anciens but contemporary works, exclusively. The library’s owner was a par- agon of bibliophilia in late-nineteenth-century France, Octave Uzanne. Uzanne’s collection boasted wha..." current