Mark, Thanks so much for your post on Pierre Bennu’s work and his “Black Moses Barbie” series. Bennu offers those of us trying to work against the representations of “disgusting, gross, slow moving machine” of contemporary media, a model for resistance. B ...
Suzanne: Thanks for a thought provoking post and like Jake, I had not heard of the attacks on scholarly organizations such as DiGRA. This is the dark side of those “unintended consequences” that does need to be addressed in thinking through the implicatio ...
Dayna: There are many great issues raised by your post, and I would like to jump in on the area that Catherine pointed out, which you raised about making our work “accessible” to communities that are part of our research. It seems that takes us, or at lea ...
Catherine: I am drawn to the way your essay and ensuing comments here breaks down the binaries of critical and affective as has been noted but also that of the scholar and fan. Here, I am not just thinking of the worthwhile emotional investment that a sch ...
Pam: This is a fascinating essay with several layers on the “unintended consequences” (to borrow Catherine Grant’s phrase) of “open source academia.” It is interesting that the expansion of audience outside the scholarly context provided another lens with ...
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(Online) Art Models Change
Building Coalitions
on Participatory Scholarship
On Fans and Dialogue
Scholarship, Self-Reflection, and Open Source Academia