The function of the library is to collect, preserve, and provide access to recorded human communication. “Documentality” is an umbrella term that embraces the complexity and scope of this enterprise. By definition, the artifacts of recorded human communication are technology dependent, language dependent, and socially constructed. These factors impact and constrain the message contained in the recordings. This poster highlights a few of the challenges and introduces a number of specializations that provide ways to overcome the difficulties. An application to the Dialogue between Science and Theology about Creation is discussed
This collection of papers on aspects of documentation theory and practice celebrates the ten‐year an...
A library catalog constitutes a communicational tool which allows access to a collection of document...
Social ontology has experienced significative growth in the last decades. In particular, a promising...
The concept of document is common and fundamental to numerous information-related disciplines. Perha...
Ordinarily the word "document" denotes a textual record. Increasingly sophisticated attempts to prov...
There is ambiguity in the use of the term bibliography for both the study of printed books and also ...
Reference in modern documentation is largely governed by theories of evidential representation by do...
This thesis aims to understand how the "digital" interrogates both the processes of legitimization a...
In this article, in distinction to documentation as an epistemic understanding of documents, I will ...
A historical-conceptual account of the different genres, technologies, modes of inscription, and inn...
Three contributions are made to understanding the nature of documents. A survey of definitions of d...
Today we live in an information society, which is to a large extent also a document society (Bucklan...
This article is a translation of one originally published in 1948 in Review of Documentation. The ar...
We describe the use of ethnomethodologically-informedethnography as a means of informing the require...
Writing, printing, telecommunications, and copying enabled the rise of the “information society” (mo...
This collection of papers on aspects of documentation theory and practice celebrates the ten‐year an...
A library catalog constitutes a communicational tool which allows access to a collection of document...
Social ontology has experienced significative growth in the last decades. In particular, a promising...
The concept of document is common and fundamental to numerous information-related disciplines. Perha...
Ordinarily the word "document" denotes a textual record. Increasingly sophisticated attempts to prov...
There is ambiguity in the use of the term bibliography for both the study of printed books and also ...
Reference in modern documentation is largely governed by theories of evidential representation by do...
This thesis aims to understand how the "digital" interrogates both the processes of legitimization a...
In this article, in distinction to documentation as an epistemic understanding of documents, I will ...
A historical-conceptual account of the different genres, technologies, modes of inscription, and inn...
Three contributions are made to understanding the nature of documents. A survey of definitions of d...
Today we live in an information society, which is to a large extent also a document society (Bucklan...
This article is a translation of one originally published in 1948 in Review of Documentation. The ar...
We describe the use of ethnomethodologically-informedethnography as a means of informing the require...
Writing, printing, telecommunications, and copying enabled the rise of the “information society” (mo...
This collection of papers on aspects of documentation theory and practice celebrates the ten‐year an...
A library catalog constitutes a communicational tool which allows access to a collection of document...
Social ontology has experienced significative growth in the last decades. In particular, a promising...