A lesson in publishing’s past is provided by George Gissing’s Victorian Era novel.
The post The Ghost of Publishing Past: George Gissing’s “New Grub Street” appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
A lesson in publishing’s past is provided by George Gissing’s Victorian Era novel.
The post The Ghost of Publishing Past: George Gissing’s “New Grub Street” appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
An interview with principals of the Scholarly Publishing Roundtable, whose work significantly shaped the Holdren Memo on public access to federally-funded research.
The post 10 Years of Public Access to the Results of Federally Funded Research: An Interview with the Scholarly Publishing Roundtable (Part 2) appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
An interview with principals of the Scholarly Publishing Roundtable, whose work significantly shaped the Holdren Memo on public access to federally-funded research.
The post 10 Years of Public Access to the Results of Federally Funded Research: An Interview with the Scholarly Publishing Roundtable (Part 1) appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
This week marks the end of an era, as the iPod is officially discontinued.
The post The End of the iPod appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
A new study offers — surprise — mostly bad news about the state of Humanities graduate education. Even while we know how important humanistic perspectives are for, well, humanity.
The post Humanities and Graduate Education: The Crisis is Real, but Not New appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
First in a series on histories made difficult or impossible though war or climate disasters, this post features two historians of Russia and Eastern Europe.
The post Unreachable/ Unwritable Histories: Russia, Ukraine, Eastern Europe appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Robert Harington and Melinda Baldwin discuss whether peer review has a role to play in uncovering scientific fraud.
The post Fraud and Peer Review: An Interview with Melinda Baldwin appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Some scientific “urban legends” get debunked in today’s video. How does incorrect “common knowledge” become established?
The post “Common Knowledge” and How False Facts Become Entrenched appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
We are always living through history. For historians, though, the current moment is always a culmination. Revisiting a post from January 2021 in preparation for a series.
The post Revisiting: Historians in Historic Times appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
How infuriating is it to watch a movie about your area of expertise and realize just how wrong it is?
The post The Burden of Knowledge: A Historian Reviews Popular Period Movies appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Are libraries “neutral”? That question is way too simplistic to serve as anything other than a political football.
The post Libraries and the Contested Terrain of “Neutrality” appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
The restoration of a glorious portrait raises questions about the scholarly Version of Record.
The post Restoring the Version of Record appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Revisiting a 2008 post noting that while it is often argued that open access will reduce the overall cost of scholarly communications, this article proposed that OA will be additive to the size of the current market.
The post Revisiting — Additive, Substitutive, Subtractive: Strategic Scenarios for Publishers in an OA World appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
More about books about libraries and librarians, with a compilation of suggested readings.
The post More on Checking out Library Books appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
2021 was a year of rapid change in our community. Here, a look at the numbers for The Scholarly Kitchen for the past 365 days.
The post The Year in Review: 2021 in The Scholarly Kitchen appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.