This special volume of Internet Archaeology collects the leading voices of blogging in archaeology to provide a critical examination of informal, online self-publication. This collection of articles is one result of over a decade of digital communication; the confluence of a conversation that grew from a few lonely voices to a tumultuous cacophony. Even so, blogging has had very little scrutiny in wider archaeological publication (but see Caraher 2008; Kansa and Deblauwe 2011). The first movement toward this volume was the Blogging Archaeology session at the 2011 Society for American Archaeology meetings, accompanied by a "Blog Carnival," a groundbreaking effort to foment reflexive discussion prior to the conference. Several participants of...
Online archives are of increasing importance in Archaeological Informatics, but like any new genre t...
A revolution has occurred within the practice and dissemination of archaeology over the past three d...
The articles in this section of Internet Archaeology came out of a Theoretical Archaeology Group ses...
While blogging in archaeology has a genealogy that can be traced back nearly two decades, the relati...
What is the context of our archaeological blogging? When we blog, are we merely shouting into the vo...
<p>A fileset to accompany an article in a special issue of <em>Internet</em> Archaeology. In this ar...
This article expands a 2008 article prepared by William Caraher for Archaeology Online which celebra...
What is the context of our archaeological blogging? When we blog, are we merely shouting into the vo...
The chapter analyzes, through case history, the evolution of online communication in the cultural se...
Surprisingly few bioarchaeology blogs currently exist, but their numbers belie their reach. In this ...
There has been more interest than I'd ever anticipated in issue 6 "Digital Publication", the first t...
Every part of archaeological practice is intimately tied to digital technologies, but how deeply do ...
How is the Web transforming the professional practice of archaeology? And as archaeologists accustom...
The Day of Archaeology (http://www.dayofarchaeology.com) was a volunteer-led international archaeolo...
This article looks at the nature of readers and readership in relation to the presentation of archae...
Online archives are of increasing importance in Archaeological Informatics, but like any new genre t...
A revolution has occurred within the practice and dissemination of archaeology over the past three d...
The articles in this section of Internet Archaeology came out of a Theoretical Archaeology Group ses...
While blogging in archaeology has a genealogy that can be traced back nearly two decades, the relati...
What is the context of our archaeological blogging? When we blog, are we merely shouting into the vo...
<p>A fileset to accompany an article in a special issue of <em>Internet</em> Archaeology. In this ar...
This article expands a 2008 article prepared by William Caraher for Archaeology Online which celebra...
What is the context of our archaeological blogging? When we blog, are we merely shouting into the vo...
The chapter analyzes, through case history, the evolution of online communication in the cultural se...
Surprisingly few bioarchaeology blogs currently exist, but their numbers belie their reach. In this ...
There has been more interest than I'd ever anticipated in issue 6 "Digital Publication", the first t...
Every part of archaeological practice is intimately tied to digital technologies, but how deeply do ...
How is the Web transforming the professional practice of archaeology? And as archaeologists accustom...
The Day of Archaeology (http://www.dayofarchaeology.com) was a volunteer-led international archaeolo...
This article looks at the nature of readers and readership in relation to the presentation of archae...
Online archives are of increasing importance in Archaeological Informatics, but like any new genre t...
A revolution has occurred within the practice and dissemination of archaeology over the past three d...
The articles in this section of Internet Archaeology came out of a Theoretical Archaeology Group ses...