{"id":1166,"date":"2008-01-22T05:30:55","date_gmt":"2008-01-22T05:30:55","guid":{"rendered":"\/ifbookblog\/?p=1166"},"modified":"2008-01-22T05:30:55","modified_gmt":"2008-01-22T05:30:55","slug":"expressive_processing_an_exper","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/2008\/01\/22\/expressive_processing_an_exper\/","title":{"rendered":"expressive processing: an experiment in blog-based peer review"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>An exciting new experiment <a href=\"http:\/\/grandtextauto.org\/2008\/01\/22\/expressive-processing-an-experiment-in-blog-based-peer-review\/\">begins today<\/a>, one which ties together many of the threads begun in our earlier &#8220;networked book&#8221; projects, from <a href=\"\/mitchellstephens\/\">Without Gods<\/a> to <a href=\"\/mckenziewark\/\">Gamer Theory<\/a> to <a href=\"\/commentpress\/\">CommentPress<\/a>. It involves a community, a manuscript, and an open peer review  process -?\u009d and, very significantly, the blessing of a leading academic press. (<i>The Chronicle of Higher Education<\/i> also <a href=\"http:\/\/chronicle.com\/free\/2008\/01\/1322n.htm\">reports<\/a>.)<br \/>\n<img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Mitpress_logo.png\" img style=\"margin:15px;\" src=\"\/blog\/archives\/Mitpress_logo.png\" width=\"150\" height=\"190\" align=\"right\"\/> The community in question is <a href=\"http:\/\/grandtextauto.org\/\">Grand Text Auto<\/a>, a popular multi-author blog about all things relating to digital narrative, games and new media, which for many readers here, probably needs no further introduction. The author, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.noahwf.com\/\">Noah Wardrip-Fruin<\/a>, a professor of communication at UC San Diego, a writer\/maker of digital fictions, and, of course, a blogger at GTxA. His book, which starting today will be posted in small chunks, open to reader feedback, every weekday over a ten-week period, is called <i>Expressive Processing: Digital Fictions, Computer Games, and Software Studies<\/i>. It probes the fundamental nature of digital media, looking specifically at the technical aspects of creation -?\u009d the machines and software we use, the systems and processes we must learn end employ in order to make media -?\u009d and how this changes how and what we create. It&#8217;s an appropriate guinea pig, when you think about it, for an open review experiment that implicitly asks, how does this new technology (and the new social arrangements it makes possible) change how a book is made?<br \/>\nThe press that has given the green light to all of this is none other than <a href=\"http:\/\/mitpress.mit.edu\/main\/home\/default.asp\">MIT<\/a>, with whom Noah has published several important, vibrantly inter-disciplinary <a href=\"http:\/\/mitpress.mit.edu\/catalog\/author\/default.asp?aid=12041\">anthologies<\/a> of new media writing. <i>Expressive Processing<\/i> his first solo-authored work with the press, will come out some time next year but now is the time when the manuscript gets sent out for review by a small group of handpicked academic peers. Doug Sery, the editor at MIT, asked Noah who would be the ideal readers for this book. To Noah, the answer was obvious: the Grand Text Auto community, which encompasses not only many of Noah&#8217;s leading peers in the new media field, but also a slew of non-academic experts -?\u009d writers, digital media makers, artists, gamers, game designers etc. -?\u009d who provide crucial alternative perspectives and valuable hands-on knowledge that can&#8217;t be gotten through more formal channels. <a href=\"http:\/\/grandtextauto.org\/2008\/01\/22\/expressive-processing-an-experiment-in-blog-based-peer-review\/\">Noah<\/a>:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Blogging has already changed how I work as a scholar and creator of digital media. Reading blogs started out as a way to keep up with the field between conferences &#8212; and I soon realized that blogs also contain raw research, early results, and other useful information that never gets presented at conferences. But, of course, that&#8217;s just the beginning. We founded Grand Text Auto, in 2003, for an even more important reason: blogs can create community. And the communities around blogs can be much more open and welcoming than those at conferences and festivals, drawing in people from industry, universities, the arts, and the general public. Interdisciplinary conversations happen on blogs that are more diverse and sustained than any I&#8217;ve seen in person.<br \/>\nGiven that ours is a field in which major expertise is located outside the academy (like many other fields, from 1950s cinema to Civil War history) the Grand Text Auto community has been invaluable for my work. In fact, while writing the manuscript for Expressive Processing I found myself regularly citing blog posts and comments, both from Grand Text Auto and elsewhere&#8230;.I immediately realized that the peer review I most wanted was from the community around Grand Text Auto.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Sery was enthusiastic about the idea (although he insisted that the traditional blind review process proceed alongside it) and so Noah contacted me about working together to adapt <a href=\"\/commentpress\/\">CommentPress<\/a> to the task at hand.<br \/>\n<img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"gtalogo.jpg\" img style=\"margin:15px;\" src=\"\/blog\/archives\/gtalogo.jpg\" width=\"228\" height=\"150\" align=\"left\"\/> The challenge technically was to integrate CommentPress into an existing blog template, applying its functionality <i>selectively<\/i> -?\u009d in other words, to make it work for a specific group of posts rather than for all content in the site. We could have made a standalone web site dedicated to the book, but the idea was to literally weave sections of the manuscript into the daily traffic of the blog. From the beginning, Noah was very clear that this was the way it needed to work, insisting that the social and technical integration of the review process were inseparable. I&#8217;ve since come to appreciate how crucial this choice was for making a larger point about the value of blog-based communities in scholarly production, and moreover how elegantly it chimes with the central notions of Noah&#8217;s book: that form and content, process and output, can never truly be separated.<br \/>\nUp to this point, CommentPress has been an all or nothing deal. You can either have a whole site working with paragraph-level commenting, or not at all. In the technical terms of WordPress, its platform, CommentPress is a <a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Theme_%28computing%29\">theme<\/a>: a template for restructuring an entire blog to work with the CommentPress interface. What we&#8217;ve done -?\u009d with the help of a talented WordPress developer named <a href=\"http:\/\/simplercomputing.net\/\">Mark Edwards<\/a>, and invaluable guidance and insight from <a href=\"http:\/\/jeremydouglass.com\/\">Jeremy Douglass<\/a> of the <a href=\"http:\/\/softwaretheory.net\/\">Software Studies<\/a> project at UC San Diego (and the <a href=\"http:\/\/writerresponsetheory.org\/wordpress\/\">Writer Response Theory<\/a> blog) -?\u009d is made CommentPress into a <a href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Plugin\">plugin<\/a>: a program that enables a specific function <i>on demand<\/i> within a larger program or site. This is an important step for CommentPress, giving it a new flexibility that it has sorely lacked and acknowledging that it is not a one-size-fits-all solution.<br \/>\nJust to be clear, these changes are not yet packaged into the general CommentPress codebase, although they will be before too long. A good test run is still needed to refine the new model, and important decisions have to be made about the overall direction of CommentPress: whether from here it definitively becomes a plugin, or perhaps forks into two paths (theme and plugin), or somehow combines both options within a single package. If you have opinions on this matter, we&#8217;re all ears&#8230;<br \/>\nBut the potential impact of this project goes well beyond the technical.<br \/>\nIt represents a bold step by a scholarly press -?\u009d one of the most distinguished and most innovative in the world -?\u009d toward developing new procedures for vetting material and assuring excellence, and more specifically, toward meaningful collaboration with existing online scholarly communities to develop and promote new scholarship.<br \/>\nIt seems to me that the presses that will survive the present upheaval will be those that learn to productively interact with grassroots publishing communities in the wild of the Web and to adopt the forms and methods they generate. I don&#8217;t think this will be a simple story of the blogosphere and other emerging media ecologies overthrowing the old order. Some of the older order will die off to be sure, but other parts of it will adapt and combine with the new in interesting ways. What&#8217;s particularly compelling about this present experiment is that it has the potential to be (perhaps now or perhaps only in retrospect, further down the line) one of these important hybrid moments -?\u009d a genuine, if slightly tentative, interface between two publishing cultures.<br \/>\nWhether the MIT folks realize it or not (their attitude at the outset seems to be respectful but skeptical), this small experiment may contain the seeds of larger shifts that will redefine their trade. The most obvious changes leveled on publishing by the Internet, and the ones that get by far the most attention, are in the area of distribution and economic models. The net flattens distribution, making everyone a publisher, and radically undercuts the heretofore profitable construct of copyright and the whole system of information commodities. The effects are less clear, however, in those hardest to pin down yet most essential areas of publishing -?\u009d the territory of editorial instinct, reputation, identity, trust, taste, community&#8230; These are things that the best print publishers still do quite well, even as their accounting departments and managing directors descend into panic about the great digital undoing. And these are things that bloggers and bookmarkers and other web curators, archivists and filterers are also learning to do well -?\u009d to sift through the information deluge, to chart a path of quality and relevance through the incredible, unprecedented din.<br \/>\nThis is the part of publishing that is most important, that transcends technological upheaval -?\u009d you might say the human part. And there is great potential for productive alliances between print publishers and editors and the digital upstarts. By delegating half of the review process to an existing blog-based peer community, effectively plugging a node of his press into the Web-based communications circuit, Doug Sery is trying out a new kind of editorial relationship and exercising a new kind of editorial choice. Over time, we may see MIT evolve to take on some of the functions that blog communities currently serve, to start providing technical and social infrastructure for authors and scholarly collectives, and to play the valuable (and time-consuming) roles of facilitator, moderator and curator within these vast overlapping conversations. Fostering, organizing, <i>designing<\/i> those conversations may well become the main work of publishing and of editors.<br \/>\nI could go on, but better to hold off on further speculation and to just watch how it unfolds. The <i>Expressive Processing<\/i> peer review experiment <a href=\"http:\/\/grandtextauto.org\/2008\/01\/22\/expressive-processing-an-experiment-in-blog-based-peer-review\/\">begins today<\/a> (the first actual manuscript section is <a href=\"http:\/\/grandtextauto.org\/2008\/01\/22\/ep-11-media-machines\/\">here<\/a>) and will run for approximately ten weeks and 100 thousand words on Grand Text Auto, with a new post every weekday during that period. At the end, comments will be sorted, selected and incorporated and the whole thing bundled together into some sort of package for MIT. We&#8217;re still figuring out how that part will work. Please go over and take a look and if a thought is provoked, join the discussion.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>An exciting new experiment begins today, one which ties together many of the threads begun in our earlier &#8220;networked book&#8221; projects, from Without Gods to Gamer Theory to CommentPress. It involves a community, a manuscript, and an open peer review process -?\u009d and, very significantly, the blessing of a leading academic press. (The Chronicle of [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[20,170,192,344,634,1200,1423,1546,1576,1861,2042],"tags":[2770],"class_list":["post-1166","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-academic","category-blogosphere","category-books","category-commentpress","category-expressiveprocessing","category-mit","category-peer_review","category-publishing","category-reading","category-the_networked_book","category-writing","tag-peer_review-academic-blogosphere-commentpress-reading-writing-books-the_networked_book-mit-publishing-expressiveprocessing"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1166","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1166"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1166\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1166"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1166"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/futureofthebook.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1166"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}