Ephemera

Intellectuals, commentators etc, Just a link to something you might want to read - - Posted on March, 15 at 5:24 pm by Helen

Here are two links to things which might not last. Get ‘em while they’re hot.

One of my favourite bloggers, Thirdcat, is blogging here while the Adelaide Festival’s on. An unexpected bounty of Thirdcatty writing! Go, read!*

Henry Farrell at Crooked Timber writes:

One of the more annoying aspects of academic publishing is that articles are usually behind a paywall and thus effectively unavailable to people without an institutional affiliation. I’ve felt this especially keenly with respect to the Public Choice special issue on blogging that Dan Drezner and I co-edited.
…The good news, via my colleague Eric Lawrence, is that Springer Verlag are making Public Choice available for free to everyone via the WWW until the end of April, as a promotional exercise. So if you want to read my or (more likely) the other contributors’ thoughts on blogging, click on this link and click through to the January 2008 issue. For a limited time only, as they say in the business.

Here’s a direct link, which will work until April, I hope. It’s a collection of articles on blogging by a who’s who of Crooked Timber bloggers (Henry Farrell, Laura McKenna, Eszter Hargittai and others), as opposed to print journalists who are typing more slowly than usual because they’re using the other hand to hold their noses.
Well done that Eric Lawrence man.

Crooked Timber is one of my favourite reads- it’s fun and a great antidote to the “academics are all pointy-heads in an ivory tower” crap we’re so used to in Australia.

 
 
 
*My pathetic personal rebellion against US cultural imperialism; the blog convention is “go read”, which isn’t our syntax, but somehow, “go and read it” (the Australian usage) seems too wordy, somehow. Is blogging accelerating the trend to US speech? Is this a bad thing? discuss.
 
 
 
Crossposted at the Balcony

Posted in Intellectuals, commentators etc, Just a link to something you might want to read |

One Response to “Ephemera”

  1. Lyn Windows XP Internet Explorer 6.0 Says:

    This complaint about academic publishing is getting more common. Good to see. It’s ridiculous to publish stuff on blogging, which relies on open access, in inaccessible places. Support First Monday I reckon.

    Can’t remember where I saw it now but some are starting to publish open access books as well, essay collections and conference papers. About time. Where the public pays for the research it’s only reasonable for them to have free access to the results.

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