Taming the Journal Monster—Building Bibliographical Bridges

C. Beyer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The idea of rounding up our special issue in this way came to us while harmonizing all the bibliographical entries into one pattern. We have tried as best as we could to double-check each single source. Sometimes, names that we have never heard before appeared over and over again, in multiple contributions. Somewhere on this planet, different scholars had come across the same readings. We simply wanted to underline this complex, interwoven net of border-crossing–border-creating literature. As editors from different fields, we have learned of many intriguing discourses that were unknown to us before. Quite often, shared literature lists make visible certain symptoms of academic echo chambers, copy-paste works, or self-referencing networks. Shared foundational texts serve as sense-making tool kits to the members of so-called ‘fields’, and give a hint at somehow negotiated vocabulary within them. Yet, what we have in front of us is an example of an interdisciplinary collaboration of writers. Since our special issue had an ‘open call’, many of our collaborators do not even know each other personally. Yet, in the end, it was possible to build bibliographical bridges between all of them—every single contribution has at least one theoretical link to another article. This way, it is possible to theoretically unite our work, and consider it as (part of) a whole. A Meta Bibliography of Some Sort—Bridging MaMo’s BibliographiesIn short, we consider as a bibliographical bridge the shared bibliographical reference to a particular work or to a particular person by at least two of our issue’s authors. If some of our authors refer to ‘writer A’, an imaginary bridge is being created between their contributions—oftentimes unconsciously. These bridges become even more intriguing when noticing that numerous authors independently investigated the identical ‘work B’, without even knowing that another contributor did so as well. Our overview is based on a close examination of all roughly 1000 bibliographical entries in this special issue. It may not be free from errors. For the detailed references, see each contributor’s bibliography individually.
驯服期刊怪物——建立书目桥梁
我们在将所有书目条目统一成一个模式的同时,想到了以这种方式整理我们的特刊。我们已经尽我们所能对每一个来源都进行了复核。有时,一些我们从未听说过的名字会一次又一次地出现在不同的文章中。在这个星球上的某个地方,不同的学者发现了相同的解读。我们只是想强调这种复杂的、交织在一起的跨越边界的文学作品。作为来自不同领域的编辑,我们了解到许多以前不知道的有趣的话语。通常,共享文献列表会暴露出学术回音室、复制粘贴作品或自我参考网络的某些症状。共享的基础文本为所谓的“领域”成员提供了意义构建工具包,并暗示了其中的某种协商词汇。然而,我们面前的是一个作家跨学科合作的例子。由于我们的特刊是“公开征集”,我们的许多合作者甚至彼此都不认识。然而,最终,在它们之间建立书目桥梁是可能的——每一篇贡献至少有一个理论链接到另一篇文章。这样,就可以把我们的工作从理论上统一起来,当作一个整体来考虑。某种类型的元参考书目——桥接MaMo的参考书目简而言之,我们认为至少有两位我们的作者对某一特定作品或某一特定人物的共享参考书目是书目桥接。如果我们的一些作者提到了“作家A”,那么他们的贡献之间就会建立起一座想象中的桥梁——通常是无意识的。当注意到许多作者独立研究相同的“作品B”时,这些桥梁变得更加有趣,甚至不知道另一个贡献者也在这样做。我们的概述是基于对本期特刊中所有大约1000个书目条目的仔细检查。它可能不会没有错误。有关详细的参考资料,请分别参阅每个贡献者的参考书目。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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