The following is a list of links to other responses to or discussions of my work around the web:
- Conversation with Kathleen Fitzpatrick, NITLE Summit Keynote Speaker (a quick back-and-forth with Nancy Millichap, NITLE’s Director of Program Development, published on one of the NITLE blogs)
- Impertinent Questions (an interview with me in the September 2009 Humanities magazine)
- Stephen Schenkenberg: The Next Generation of Scholarly Publishing (a post pointing to and quoting from the interview above)
- Black Marks on Wood Pulp: The not-so-imminent death of the novel (another post referring to the Humanities interview)
- “This Is Scholarship” (a video, published in Kairos, exploring the multimodal future of scholarship; my work is referenced just before the halfway point)
- Techno-Cultures (a post to a class blog broadly referencing my recent work)
- Queer Geek Theory, and Related Wanderings (a post focused on a talk I gave at USC in early 2009)
- info NeoGnostic: Scrolling the Scroll (a response to my CommentPress article)
- Lifelong Learning (a post responding to my MediaCommons article)
- if:book (a post on the Institute for the Future of the Book’s blog announcing the MediaCommons article)
- One-hundred-thirteenth Street (another post responding to the MediaCommons article)
- Scholarly Communication News @ BC (another post referring to the MediaCommons article)
- TheoLib: Libraries as publishers (a response to some of my earlier writing about digital scholarly publishing)
- Networked Public Culture: Networked Scholarship and the Social Life of Books (a post to a class blog at Loyola University Chicago responding to a cluster of articles on the future of the book, including a couple of articles of mine)
- MetaMedia: The Ethics of Class Blogging (a response to a blog post of mine thinking about ethical issues surrounding the use of blogs in undergraduate instruction)
- Infocult: Web 2.0 narrative (a report on a talk I gave at Reed College in 2006)
- Speedysnail: You Are Where? (a 2004 post by Rory Ewins, a scholar at the University of Edinburgh, which first made clear to me the potential reach that my blog could have, as compared with more traditional forms of scholarly publishing)
[updated 7 January 2010]