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Publishing Research Quarterly, 2018
Dissertations constitute a major characteristic of doctoral studies, culminating in a contribution to knowledge in academic disciplines. Representative of emerging methodological approaches and insights into current trends and schools of thought, in the humanities and social sciences, they can become the foundation for more research, refinement, resulting in a revised manuscript for publication as a book/monograph. For academic historians, dissertations, when revised become their first major scholarly contribution. University press books in history originating from revised dissertations [RD's] for the years 1998-2013 were chosen for their intellectual and bibliographical characteristics, especially for disciplinary or inter/multidisciplinarity. Among findings, Interdisciplinary research is prominent, Eurocentric, and North American focused. Average pages per book is 200-299 and average price is $66.80. Presses are specialized and offset Cambridge and Oxford dominance in overall history publication. Moreover, [RD's] appearing in area and subject studies constitute a strong focus. Keywords Characteristics Á Disciplinary Á Books Á Dissertations Á History Á Inter/multidisciplinarity Academic historians consider the book or precisely, the monograph, the gold standard [13]. The expeditious nature of article publication permits rapid dissemination without investing a massive amount time for a book-length work [3]. For post-doctoral historians, the first book, or monograph is de regueur, especially in the North American academic environment. The requirement of a first book to achieve tenure in research-driven universities is the driver in the production
This article was first presented as a paper at 'Bringing together', the inaugural national conference of the
… interdisciplinariedad y la transdisciplinariedad en la …, 2007
The aim of this text is to discuss some aspects of the concept of discipline from the standpoint of LIS by showing how "epistemological mutations" in the discipline of history have changed its traditional epistemological starting points and thus the way knowledge in the domain of history is organized. Something that in its prolongation maybe appears as a new kind of disciplinarity (due to epistemological changes) in the field of humanities and social science, that at the same time is challenging the conception of traditional and historical given disciplines. A basic assumption is that bibliographical classification schedules, categories, and classes cannot be regarded apart from some kind of sociological, ideological or epistemological meta-understanding. Accordingly, when this meta-understanding change, also the principles for knowledge organization alter.
Professional historians and the historiographical revolution 1960-1990 The use of the term " professional historians " has a conceptual aspect which is of importance. This aspect will be developed in the first part of this essay. In the second part the main objective is to connect a thoroughgoing change of historical writing in Western Europe and North America (apparently with wider ramifications) 1960-1990 with a change of historical professionalism. In the third part this change is related to the professional view of important history-writing, not only in Western Europe and North America but currently widely spread also in other parts of the world.
The American Historical Review, 2001
Books and the Sciences in History The history of the sciences and the history of the book are complementary, and there has been much recent innovative research in the intersection of these lively fields. This accessibly-written, well-illustrated volume is the first systematic general work to do justice to the fruits of scholarship in this area. The twenty specially commissioned chapters, by an international cast of distinguished scholars, cover the period from the Carolingian renaissance of learning to the mid-nineteenthcentury consolidation of science. They examine all aspects of the authorship, production, distribution, and reception of manuscripts, books and journals in the various sciences. An editorial introduction surveys the many profitable interactions of the history of the sciences with the history of books. Two afterwords highlight the relevances of this wide-ranging survey to the study of the development of scientific disciplines and to the current predicaments of scientific communication in the electronic age.
Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2016
Publishing Research Quarterly, 2020
History journal articles constitute a large and diverse body of scholarly literature in history. This discussion frames the relative importance of articles as a communication ecology within the professionalization of historians and to the body of historical knowledge. Their discrete nature is examined and their particular characteristics are tied to the complex position they occupy in the dissemination of research and value to academic historians vis-à-vis promotion and tenure. The status of the article, its perceived purpose and value in relation to the importance of the monograph to academic historians, further frames this tension, characterising the political economy of academic historical scholarship. Examples of journals and specialization are discussed within academic history's publishing ecosystem.
Journal of the History of Biology, 2001
Carl Becker's classic 1931 address "Everyman his own historian" holds lessons for historians of science today. Like the professional historians he spoke to, we are content to display the Ivory-Tower Syndrome, writing scholarly treatises only for one another, disdaining both the general reader and our natural readership, scientists. Following his rhetoric, I argue that scientists are well aware of their own historicity, and would be interested in lively and balanced histories of science. It is ironic that the very professionalism that ought to equip us to write such histories has imposed on us a powerful taboo that renders us unable to do so.
Comparative Education Review, 2021
The present article analyzes dissertations written by international doctoral graduates at Teachers College during the first two decades of the twentieth century. By focusing on the earliest period of the doctoral program, our work seeks to understand the role of the dissertation archive in producing and governing the emerging field of academic education research with global entanglements. Questions about what constitutes a dissertation, what counts as scholarship, and how expertise is defined were all in flux at this time. Setting the lens exclusively on international students allows us to begin to see the generation of a global language of education shaped by power/knowledge relations within academia.
Space, Imagination and the Cosmos from Antiquity to the Early Modern Period, ed. F. A. Bakker, D. Bellis, C.R. Palmerino, Springer, 2018
Jahrbuch des Bundesinsituts für Kultur und Geschichte der Deutschen im Östlichen Europa (BKGE), 2017
Derechos y Libertades, 2024
Logic and Logical Philosophy, 2019
Human Movement, 2011
Clinical Transplantation, 2007
CTE Workshop Proceedings
Journal of Korean Society of Coastal and Ocean Engineers, 2014
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2021
Journal of Experimental Biology and Agricultural Sciences, 2015