• @kerim – Hey, it was great meeting you too. Thanks for the great discussions and the stuff to think about. #
  • @mediacultures – Adam, it was great to meet you and I'd love to think about some sort of future collaboration! #
  • @Wolowic It was great meeting you too! We should definitely try to think about a future collaboration or something! #aaa2010 #

Powered by Twitter Tools

  • @anthrojason Glad to hear I'm not the only one still working on their paper. #AAA2010 #
  • RT @jenkersey: Thanks to @billguinee for putting together #AAA10 presos by Twitterers. Add yours here #
  • @Chanders – Awesome! Glad too hear you'll be there! #
  • @Chanders & @mathewi: isn't the real web2.0 way to just scrape Wikipedia and then cut it to the necessary wordcount? #
  • @DeniceSzafran – I'm down with the Thursday Tweetup but it needs to be after the late panel gets out (9.30) #aaa2010 #
  • #aaa2010 folks: Anyone getting in to the airport tonight around 6pm who wants to split a ride? DM me. #
  • Rock on… Living on a Prayer is playing @ the Jet Blue terminal at JKF. What a way to get ready to head to new orleans and #aaa10 #
  • Welcome to NO. Finished "near final draft" on the flight. Still have to do PPT. Oh, Louis Armstrong rock for having free wifi! #aaa10 #
  • Filipe's Taqueria is amazing cheap eats in the French Quarter. A killer option for grad students attending #aaa2010 on a budget! #
  • @Not_Melliroo Where did you find the west african? #
  • @abue beware elbows of death! I've seen ong bak… I know what they can do! #
  • @kerim — is there free wifi there? #
  • @Not_Melliroo thnx for the recommendation… sounds great! #
  • #AAA2010 Powerpoint #fail It doesn't handle FLV files!!?? #
  • Woot. need to do a cheap and fast conversion (like FLV to MPG)? Check out http://www.mediaconverter.org/ #
  • @kerim any chance you are still @ PJ's? #
  • RT @r3x0r: My session is at noon today: stdo 8, 2nd flr Marriott, "Avatar and Anthropology". COME AND LET ME ROCK YOU SHAKA KAHN #aaa2010 #
  • & for more Blue Peeps 2day @ #aaa2010 check out Mishen Carpentier's "Avatar & Indexicality" : 1-0780, on: Gallier A, 4 flr #
  • #aaa2010 – check out Virtuality, simulation, social life @ 6.00 – balcony N, 4th flr marriot – virtual war, therapists, & surgery #
  • No worries… Not sure if due to timing I can see yours… #
  • #AAA2010 #fail – thinking that going to PJ's coffee down the streer would be faster than lobby starbucks… http://yfrog.com/5yk5ubvj #
  • @jennycool … And I was a proud, gryping lemming. ;) when are you presenting? #
  • @lisbet – even better than lulz was @BiellaColeman making a #goatse at #AAA2010 panel… #

Powered by Twitter Tools

  • Trying to writing about an #ethnography that fails precisely because it almost succeeds is really kicking my butt! #writersblock #
  • RT @BiellaColeman: I am in Rio One More Night! My flight is 17 hours delayed! (+ #RandPaul = sign! We'll miss U but U belong to brazil now) #
  • @hughmcguire Congratz on the news of a new arrival (or should I say edition) to the world and your family! #
  • @nancybaym – can't recommend a qualitative analysis package, but would you tweet whatever consensus suggestions you get? #
  • RT @davidberiss Restaurant guide for AAA meeting in New Orleans, along w/ links to reliable bar lists: http://wp.me/pLqnj-5N #food #AAA2010 #
  • Hey #AAA10 #anthro peeps — should the social "we" try to organize a tweet up in New Orleans? #

Powered by Twitter Tools

  • Sitting at Dulles on my way out to SF & the Internet Archive to give a talk that mashes Vannevar Bush and Walter Benjamin… #
  • @R_Nash I'm only mentioning Work of Art… I'll be spending time with Task of the Translator and Unpacking my Library… in reply to R_Nash #
  • @R_Nash — btw Woot! The notorious Benjamin representing at Books in Browsers…. #
  • RT @R_Nash: @mattBernius It's all about the Benjamins. <- This is why @R_Nash is full of win! #
  • @R_Nash – I'm going with the *right* pronunciation. @BTW @Stml is totally correct about the book (object) and aura… #
  • Of course the entire "Right" thing is a combination of the University of Chicago and growing up having people butcher my name… #
  • @alexismadrigal Thnx… btw, you should chck this great post on Benjamin, Aura, Books & eBooks – http://booktwo.org/notebook/openbookmarks/ #
  • Oy… It is luggagageddon on this flight… There is no more room overhead… http://yfrog.com/75et8cj #
  • Good morning SF & #bib10 On the bus to the Internet Archive. http://yfrog.com/jbl36bj #
  • And Books In Browsers #BiB10 is off with a welcome from @naypinya #
  • Note that cuniform had DRM — to protect the content of contracts they would bake one tablet inside another. #bib10 #
  • #BIB10 – Many archives are now also collecting older, working computers, so visitors can still access early digital works like Freakshow #
  • @ToughLoveforX Just started a Twapper Keeper for the conference in reply to ToughLoveforX #
  • @Allennoren – O'Reilly's biggest competitor isn't a publisher, it's Google. It's also one of our biggest advocates. #bib10 #
  • @billmccoy is sharing the good and the awesome of the new #ePub3 standard #bib10 #
  • #epub v3 – Embedded fonts are standard, SVG integration, core content HTML 5 standard (w/its semantic markup) #bib10 #
  • RT @Hadrien: SVG for manga & comics in #EPUB 3? We also need an XML format to describe the "scenario" #BiB10 <- +1 for this idea #
  • RT @craigmod: Trad book designers — want to know how to stay 'relevant'? Learn to hand code HTML5 with design nuance and elegance. #bib10 #
  • See the under development #epub 3 spec at – http://code.google.com/p/epub-revision #bib10 #
  • @craigmod – Not sure if McLuhan's Hot/Cold is the right metaphor for enhanced ebooks… #
  • @draccah – ADDING media to an ebooks is not the same as INTEGRATING media into an eBook. #Bib10 #
  • @draccah – iDrakula i app recreates dracula in a serialized modern media environment – #bib10 #
  • @anthologize (http://anthologize.org/) gets a shout-out at #bib10 (sorry for the extra tweets) #
  • Since the advent of books, individual's reading histrories have been sought by regimes – spanish inq, mccarthy, post911 ACLU @ #bib10 #
  • Nicole Ozer of ACLU points #Bib10 to an eBook on Reader Privacy (in Ebooks and physical books as well) – #
  • Also free from ACLU of Nor Cal: Privacy and Free Speech Primer for Businesses – #bib10 #privacy #
  • Nicole Ozer – if you (business) are being sued because you're trying to protect users privacy, call ACLU before you go to press #bib10 #
  • #bib10 – How Different are Young Adults from Older Adults When it Comes to Information Privacy? – #
  • RT @kevinmarks: ACLU site http://trackedinamerica.org documentary site on the history of surveillance in the US #BiB10 #
  • #bib10 – Free eBooks still generate value for the publisher in terms of attention and more importantly analytics #
  • Brewster kale directing group photo at #BIB10 http://yfrog.com/n2yimlnj #
  • Books without Barriers & AnyDaisy firefox plugin ads makes books available to the blind through browsers! #bib10 #
  • RT @openlibrary: Mang's #bib10 presentation + sneak peek of our new BookReader! NB: Might break etc. #
  • Bookreader works great on a Windows 7 touch enabled tablet. It friggin' rocks! And no downloads, it just goes! – #bib10 #
  • And Brewster Kale reminds @mangbot to remind us that Bookreader is all opensource. DL it here: #bib10 #
  • Containers were always an option… it's just that for about 1500 we didn't have any other container options for text… #bib10 #
  • 1500 years (that is)… #bib10 #
  • RT @craigmod: @brianoleary wins the magical presentation from the future award. #bib10 (+1) #
  • Container Myopia – How publishers fail to see that they are in the content solution business – @brianoleary #BIB10 #
  • @brianoleary – Piracy is the result of a bad API! (me: yes! yes! yes!) #bib10 #
  • Brewster Kahle: This is the transformation of books. We're not just watching it. We're participating in it. #bib10 #
  • Brewster Khale: We're trying to build the Library of Alexandria v2.0. #bib10 #
  • Woot! Brewster Kahle name checks and gives props to @bookglutton and #ibisreader @liza #bib10 #
  • @bekka_black It's a brilliant idea & execution. Totally in keeping w/Bram Stoker (& meta). I'll be talking about it 2morrow as well @ #bib10 in reply to bekka_black #
  • The "internet archive players" demonstrate their reader ap's in-browser lending… you can check out a book an its exclusive to you. #bib10 #
  • @R_Nash : Today at #bib10 is all about the [walter] benjamins! <- Me and how! #
  • @R_Nash: The writer is always a reader… #bib10 #
  • Slight build on @R_Nash – Before Gutenberg, for most people, you owned a text by being able to recite it from memory. #bib10 #
  • @bookglutton' Aaron Miller: What's still missing from ebooks is everything that the web does well. #bib10 #
  • RT @katmeis: Bob Stein's speech #bib10 material available at http://futureofthebook.org/social-reading/ #
  • #bib10 attendees form a "box brigade" to help the Internet Archive move CDs. See the movie of one box's journey – #
  • From San Fran to Nashville… #
  • And pancakes! http://yfrog.com/m9z11gvj #

Powered by Twitter Tools

As part of my talk at this year’s Books in Browser’s conference hosted at the Internet Archive, I discussed the creative possibilities of a Canon. Over the last few months, I’ve unscientifically, and completely biased-ly approached a number of smart people involved in publishing and the hacking of books to make suggestions about titles to include.

Here’s the current big list as it stands. Where possible, I’ve included a link to the file to read (and a ‘gray’ copies of some of the shorter texts).

Have a suggestion? Add it as a comment to this post and I’ll add it. Then, on December 1st, I’ll be opening the list up to an (unscientific) polling process to see if we can whittle down the list to a smaller core selection of works.

So without adieu.

Proposed works to include in a Canon of Publishing

Business & Law

  • Anderson, Chris. 2004. “The long tail” in Wired Magazine. New York: Hyperion. (external link)
  • Christensen, Clayton M. 2003. The innovator’s dilemma: the revolutionary book that will changed the way you do business. New York: HarperCollins.
  • Lessig, Lawrence. 2004. Free culture: how big media uses technology and the law to lock down culture and control creativity. New York: Penguin Press. (external link to download)
  • Levitt, Ted. 1960. “Marketing Myopia” in the Harvard Business Review. (pdf)
  • Simon, Herbert. 1971. “Designing Organizations for an Information-Rich World” inComputer, Communications and the Public Interest, Johns Hopkins University Press.

Design

  • Gill, Eric. 1936. An essay on typography. London: Sheed & Ward.
  • McCloud, Scott. 1994. Understanding comics: the invisible art. New York: HarperPerennial.
  • Warde, Beatrice. 1955. The Crystal Goblet. (pdf)

Fiction

  • Bradbury, Ray. 1953. Fahrenheit 451. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Balzac, Honore´ de. 1901. Lost illusions. London: Privately printed for members of the Society of English Bibliophilists. (Ellen Marriage, Translator) (external link)
  • Borges, Jorge Luis. 1964. Labyrinths; selected stories & other writings. New York: New Directions Pub. Corp.
  • Cortazar, Julio. 1963. Hopscotch. Dewey. (Gregory Rabassa, translator)
  • Doctorow, Cory. 2006. Printcrime. (external link)
  • Miller, Walter M. 1975. A Canticle for Leibowitz. Boston: Gregg Press.
  • Sloan, Robin. 2009. Mr. Penumbra’s Twenty-Four-Hour Book Store. (external link)
  • Stephenson, Neal. 1995. The Diamond Age, or, Young lady’s illustrated primer. New York: Bantam Books.
  • Vinge, Vernor. 2006. Rainbows end. New York: Tor.

Film

Web and New Media Publications

Media, Reading, & Writing

  • Adams, Lisa, and John Heath. 2007. Why we read what we read: a delightfully opinionated journey through contemporary bestsellers. Naperville, Ill: Sourcebooks.
  • Anderson, Benedict R. O’G. 1991. Imagined communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. London: Verso.
  • Benjamin, Walter. 1923. Task of the Translator. (Harry Zohn, Translator) (pdf)
  • Benjamin, Walter. 1931. Unpacking my Library. (Harry Zohn, Translator) (pdf)
  • Benjamin, Walter. 1936. Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction. (Harry Zohn, Translator) (pdf)
  • Bolter, J. David. 1991. Writing space: the computer, hypertext, and the history of writing. Hillsdale, N.J.: L. Erlbaum Associates.
  • Fitzpatrick, Kathleen. 2006. The anxiety of obsolescence: the American novel in the age of television. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press.
  • Illich, Ivan, and Barry Sanders. 1988. ABC: the alphabetization of the popular mind. San Francisco: North Point Press.
  • Innis, Harrold. 1949. The bias of communication. Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science, 15(4), 457–476. University of Toronto Press. (pdf)
  • Lanham, Richard A. 2007. The economics of attention: style and substance in the age of information. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Lethem, Jonathan.  Feb 2007. “The Ecstasy of Influence” in Harper’s Magazine. New York. Vol. 314, Iss. 1881; p. 59. (pdf)
  • Levy, Steven.  November 26, 2007. “The Future of Reading” in Newsweek. (external link)
  • McArthur, Tom. 1986. Worlds of reference: lexicography, learning, and language from the clay tablet to the computer. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Cambridge University Press.
  • McLuhan, Marshall. 1964. Understanding media; the extensions of man. New York: McGraw-Hill.
  • Meyrowitz, Joshua. 1985. No sense of place: the impact of electronic media on social behavior. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Ong, Walter J. 1982. Orality and literacy: the technologizing of the word. London: Methuen.
  • Popper, Karl R. 1972. Objective knowledge; an evolutionary approach. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Publishing and Printing

  • Arnold, Bruce. 1992. The scandal of Ulysses: the sensational life of a twentieth-century masterpiece. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
  • Bennett, Paul A. 1963. Books and printing; a treasury for typophiles. Cleveland: World Pub. Co.
  • Chappell, Warren, and Robert Bringhurst. 1999. A short history of the printed word. Point Roberts, WA: Hartley & Marks Publishers.
  • Cerf, Bennett. 2002. At Random: the reminiscences of Bennett Cerf. New York: Random House.
  • Eisenstein, Elizabeth L. 1983. The printing revolution in early modern Europe. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Cambridge University Press.
  • Epstein, Jason. March 1, 1990. “The Decline and Rise of Publishing” in the New York Review of Books. (pdf)
  • Epstein, Jason. April 27, 2000. “The Rattle of Pebbles” in the New York Review of Books. (pdf)
  • Epstein, Jason. 2001. Book business: publishing past, present, and future. New York: W.W. Norton.
  • Febvre, Lucien Paul Victor, and Henri-Jean Martin. 1976. The coming of the book: the impact of printing 1450-1800. The foundations of history library. London: N.L.B.
  • Greco, Albert N., Clara E. Rodriguez, and Robert M. Wharton. 2007. The culture and commerce of publishing in the 21st century. Stanford, Calif: Stanford Business Books.
  • Miller, Russell. 1998. Magnum: fifty years at the front line of history. New York: Grove Press.
  • Owen, David. 2004. Copies in seconds: how a lone inventor and an unknown company created the biggest communication breakthrough since Gutenberg : Chester Carlson and the birth of the Xerox machine. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Potter, Clarkson N. 1990. Who does what and why in book publishing. Secaucus, NJ: Carol Pub. Group.
  • Ransom, Will. 1929. Private presses and their books. New York: R.R. Bowker company.
  • Rogers, W. G. 1965. Wise men fish here: the story of Frances Steloff and the Gotham Book Mart. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World.
  • Silverman, Al. 2008. The time of their lives: the golden age of great American book publishers, their editors, and authors. New York: Truman Talley Books.
  • Shatzkin, Leonard. 1982. In cold type: overcoming the book crisis. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Striphas, Theodore G. 2009. The late age of print: everyday book culture from consumerism to control. New York: Columbia University Press. (external link to download)
  • Thompson, John B. 2010. Merchants of culture: the publishing business in the twenty-first century. Cambridge: Polity.
  • Unwin, Sir Stanley. 1946. The truth about publishing. London: G. Allen & Unwin Ltd. (internet archive)

Technology