The rise of library-based digital scholarly publishing creates new opportunities to meet scholars’ evolving publishing needs. This article presents findings from a national survey of humanities scholars on their attitudes toward digital publishing, the diversification of scholarly products, changing perceptions of authorship, and the desire to reach new audiences. Based on survey findings, the authors offer recommendations for how library publishers can make unique contributions to the scholarly publishing ecosystem and support the advancement of digital scholarship in the humanities by accommodating and sustaining more diverse products of digital scholarship, supporting new modes of authorship, and helping scholars reach broader audiences ...
The gradual transition to a digital society necessitates that all organizations and institutes adapt...
There is an abundance of innovative publishing happening within the humanities, much of which is ena...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
The rise of library-based digital scholarly publishing creates new opportunities to meet scholars’ e...
Arguably, the recognition that the printed word is no longer the main medium for knowledge productio...
Changing reality of research production in the Humanities A new research paradigm With the massive a...
Purpose: The research upon which this article is largely based comes from a year-long international ...
This version of the article was submitted to American Libraries Magazine on November 12, 2015. It is...
The way in which researchers publish their work is undergoing a profound transformation. The introdu...
In Debates in the Digital Humanities, Matthew Gold opens with an essay entitled “The Digital Humanit...
The last two decades of the 20th century brought rapid and cataclysmic change to the industrialized ...
Purpose: The research upon which this article is largely based comes from a year-long international ...
The changes we have seen in recent years in the scholarly publishing world - including the growth of...
These materials reflect work done for a 2016 article for American Libraries magazine ( http://americ...
Publishing Without Walls (PWW) is a Mellon-funded initiative at the University of Illinois led by th...
The gradual transition to a digital society necessitates that all organizations and institutes adapt...
There is an abundance of innovative publishing happening within the humanities, much of which is ena...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
The rise of library-based digital scholarly publishing creates new opportunities to meet scholars’ e...
Arguably, the recognition that the printed word is no longer the main medium for knowledge productio...
Changing reality of research production in the Humanities A new research paradigm With the massive a...
Purpose: The research upon which this article is largely based comes from a year-long international ...
This version of the article was submitted to American Libraries Magazine on November 12, 2015. It is...
The way in which researchers publish their work is undergoing a profound transformation. The introdu...
In Debates in the Digital Humanities, Matthew Gold opens with an essay entitled “The Digital Humanit...
The last two decades of the 20th century brought rapid and cataclysmic change to the industrialized ...
Purpose: The research upon which this article is largely based comes from a year-long international ...
The changes we have seen in recent years in the scholarly publishing world - including the growth of...
These materials reflect work done for a 2016 article for American Libraries magazine ( http://americ...
Publishing Without Walls (PWW) is a Mellon-funded initiative at the University of Illinois led by th...
The gradual transition to a digital society necessitates that all organizations and institutes adapt...
There is an abundance of innovative publishing happening within the humanities, much of which is ena...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...