User contributions for Wtrettien
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
13 December 2022
- 20:0120:01, 13 December 2022 diff hist +107 Facsimiles No edit summary
12 December 2022
- 01:2201:22, 12 December 2022 diff hist +97 Facsimiles No edit summary
- 00:4400:44, 12 December 2022 diff hist +173 Facsimiles No edit summary
- 00:1800:18, 12 December 2022 diff hist +84 Facsimiles No edit summary
10 December 2022
- 18:5518:55, 10 December 2022 diff hist +41,307 Warren 2022 No edit summary current
30 November 2022
- 19:0919:09, 30 November 2022 diff hist −33 Nordenfalk 1976 No edit summary
- 18:2818:28, 30 November 2022 diff hist +85 Nordenfalk 1976 No edit summary
- 12:1312:13, 30 November 2022 diff hist +327 Lithography No edit summary
- 12:1112:11, 30 November 2022 diff hist +94 Facsimiles →Writings on facsimiles
- 12:1012:10, 30 November 2022 diff hist +11,359 N Nordenfalk 1976 Created page with "Nordenfalk, Carl. ''Color of the Middle Ages: A Survey of Book Illumination Based on Color Facsimiles of Medieval Manuscripts.'' Pittsburgh: University Art Gallery, 1976. Early, “handmade facsimiles” * Codex grandior; Cassiodorus ordered to be written and illuminated for his monastery at Vivarium; Biscop’s successor Ceolfrid used it as a model for 3 copies, took them back as gift to the pope; only Codex Amiantus survives * Utrecht psalter shoe “the Carolingian..."
- 12:0912:09, 30 November 2022 diff hist +193 Main Page →Book History
29 November 2022
- 19:5419:54, 29 November 2022 diff hist +131 Lithography No edit summary
- 19:4819:48, 29 November 2022 diff hist +16,131 N McLean 1972 Created page with "McLean, Ruari. ''Victorian Book Design and Colour Printing.'' Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972. “Mechanical composition, and the many new faces introduced by the Linotype and Monotype companies, did not really begin to affect book design until the 1920s.” (3) “In 1837 the media of book illustration were, as they had been for nearly 400 years, the wood block and the copper plate, and since about 1800 steel had been used as a harder alternative to cop..."
- 19:4719:47, 29 November 2022 diff hist +128 Main Page →Book History
25 November 2022
- 22:1922:19, 25 November 2022 diff hist +148 Lithography No edit summary
22 November 2022
- 01:2801:28, 22 November 2022 diff hist +136 Lithography →British context
21 November 2022
- 01:4801:48, 21 November 2022 diff hist −1 Lithography →== French context ==
- 01:4701:47, 21 November 2022 diff hist +1,335 Lithography No edit summary
- 01:3001:30, 21 November 2022 diff hist +1,885 Lithography →French context
- 01:2301:23, 21 November 2022 diff hist +3 Lithography →French context
- 01:2201:22, 21 November 2022 diff hist +6,324 Lithography No edit summary
19 November 2022
- 21:1021:10, 19 November 2022 diff hist +278 N Lithography Created page with "Twyman 2001 * Covers the basics of lithography's development and spread * Discusses genres where lithography was successful and why * Final discussion of how lithography defies traditional bibliography and could be understood as presaging designing documents with computers"
- 21:0321:03, 19 November 2022 diff hist +17 Jacquard loom woven book No edit summary current
- 20:3820:38, 19 November 2022 diff hist +81 Decolonial Book History No edit summary
- 20:3720:37, 19 November 2022 diff hist +21,008 N Twyman 2001 Created page with "Twyman, Michael. ''Breaking the Mould : The First Hundred Years of Lithography.'' London: British Library, 2001. “the feature of lithography that was most commonly remarked upon in the earliest accounts of the process: that lithographs are not reproductions but multiplied originals” (5-6) — footnote goes to Henry Banker’ treatise, Lithography, or, the art of making drawings on stone, for the purpose of being multiplied by printing (1813) “lithography made i..." current
- 20:3720:37, 19 November 2022 diff hist +131 Main Page →Book History
- 20:0420:04, 19 November 2022 diff hist +337 Reprographics No edit summary
12 November 2022
- 02:3702:37, 12 November 2022 diff hist +17,451 Ahnert et al 2020 No edit summary current
11 November 2022
- 02:0902:09, 11 November 2022 diff hist +5,824 Caswell →4 Imagining Liberatory Memory Work current
- 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