Project Findings at IC2S2 (Northwestern University) July 13, 2016October 12, 2016 jshanahan Leave a comment On June 25th, Professor Robin Burke (Computing) presented on “Reading Chicago Reading” methods at the second annual International Conference on Computational Social Science at Northwestern. View slides.… Read more
Why “City Scale” Matters June 23, 2016October 10, 2016 jshanahan Leave a comment Reading Benjamin Barber’s suggestive If Mayors Ruled the World: Dysfunctional Nations, Rising Cities (Yale UP, 2013) reminds me of the lofty aspirations Mayor Richard M. Daley had for the One Book One Chicago program in its early years. In a prefatory note in the guide for the third season, fall 2002, on Willa Cather’s My Antonia, he wrote: “One Book, One Chicago encourages all our citizens to read the same book at the same time to create a citywide book club. … One Book, One Chicago cultivates a culture of reading and discussion by bringing our diverse city together around one great… Read more
Capturing the “Virtual Text” of Book Groups April 19, 2016October 12, 2016 jshanahan Leave a comment Academic studies of book groups have noted the “virtual text” created over time in the process of a book’s discussion. In the useful account of Elizabeth Long (2003), the virtual text of a reading group is that evolving and largely ambient set of aesthetic claims, wishes for and production of additional tools (maps, historical footnotes, illustrations, fanfic spinoffs, lists, etc.), and social bonds of elective affinity that make reading — despite its solitary default — a social phenomenon, particularly outside of academia. By drawing on actual circulation… Read more
Thoughts on “The Library Beyond the Book” April 2, 2016June 30, 2017 jshanahan Leave a comment Public libraries, like many institutions, are data-rich but information-poor. In their recent investigation of “the library beyond the book,” Harvard’s Jeffrey T. Schnapp and Matthew Battles muse over the massive data-stream radiated by contemporary libraries: “Every time a book is taken off the shelf, a file is downloaded, or a computer work station is booted up, a story is told, and cataloged, and filed away in a database. In this way, each act of reading in the library broadcasts a handful of seeds, from which new growths of data will either spring—or disappear into a forest of statistical… Read more