Observing that humanities scholars rarely jointly author articles, as I did in my last post, comes as no surprise. As Blaise Cronin writes, “Collaboration—for which co-authorship is the most visible and compelling indicator—is established practice in both the life and physical sciences, reflecting the industrial scale, capital-intensiveness and complexity of much contemporary scientific research. But [...]
Filed under: collaboration, digital humanities, digital scholarship | 9 Comments »
