:Digital Codicology: Medieval Books and Modern Labor

Lisa Fagin Davis
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Abstract

Using a captivating blend of ethnographic narrative and medieval manuscript case studies, Digital Codicology: Medieval Books and Modern Labor pushes back against the twin dangers inherent in academic digitization processes. On the one hand, Whearty rejects any “techno-utopian” idea that digitization renders historical documents radically and universally accessible (32). On the other, Whearty also rejects the outright dismissal of digital texts by academics who scoff at their “disem-bodied” nature. Such scholars contend that digitized texts erase (or manipulate) the materiality of the “original” text and, in doing so, obscure the research apparatus that should contextualize the text (11-19). Whearty’s proverbial via media is found in embracing the history of digitization as a history worthy of its own analysis. Whearty similarly recognizes the digital codex as a material object in its own right, part of the ongoing reception history of medieval texts. Engaging the same methods scholars employ to analyze the contributors to medieval manuscripts, Whearty demonstrates the value of foregrounding the “labor and laborers” that produced digital texts (32). She has even created the “Caswell Test” to encourage authors to credit (and listen to!) archivists and librarians as a part of their work (17). Whearty’s intra-historical method thus highlights the enduring questions to consider when engaging texts, regardless of medium or era: Why and how was a text produced? What economic, emotional, and editorial factors contributed to the decisions made in producing this text? Digital Codicology peels back the layers of these questions, engaging the entirety of the digitization process in a variety of institutions. In many instances, Whearty draws on specifics from her time as a Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) Postdoctoral Fellow in Data Curation for Medieval Manuscripts at Stanford University. Although she was trained as
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数字编纂学:中世纪书籍与现代劳动
数字编纂学》将人种学叙事与中世纪手稿案例研究相结合,引人入胜:数字编纂学:中世纪书籍与现代劳动》反击了学术数字化过程中固有的双重危险。一方面,Whearty 拒绝接受任何 "技术乌托邦 "式的观点,即数字化使历史文献从根本上可以被普遍获取(32)。另一方面,Whearty 也反对那些嘲笑数字文本 "非实体化 "的学者对数字文本的全盘否定。这些学者认为,数字化文本抹杀(或篡改)了 "原始 "文本的物质性,并因此掩盖了本应使文本语境化的研究工具(11-19)。Whearty 的谚语 "通过媒体"(via media)就是将数字化的历史视为值得自己分析的历史。Whearty 同样承认数字手抄本本身就是一种物质对象,是中世纪文本持续接受史的一部分。Whearty 采用了学者们分析中世纪手稿撰稿人的相同方法,展示了突出制作数字文本的 "劳动和劳动者 "的价值(32)。她甚至创建了 "卡斯韦尔测试",鼓励作者将档案管理员和图书管理员作为其工作的一部分,并给予肯定(并听取他们的意见!)(17)。因此,Whearty 的内在历史方法强调了在研究文本时,无论媒介或时代如何,都要考虑的永恒问题:为什么以及如何制作文本?哪些经济、情感和编辑因素促成了这一文本的制作决定?数字编纂学》将这些问题层层剥开,将各种机构的数字化过程全部纳入其中。在许多情况下,Whearty 利用了她在斯坦福大学担任图书馆与信息资源委员会 (CLIR) 中世纪手稿数据整理博士后期间的具体经验。虽然她接受的培训是
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