- Current Issue
- Lessons in Value: Working Relationships in John Slatin's CWRL--An Intervew with Bret Benjamin
- Thoughts About John - Jason Craft
- “The Meanesse of Our Witt” - Margaret Downs-Gamble
- Bridging Difference: John Slatin Changed Everything - Lisa Justine Hernandez
- Rethinking Usability for Web 2.0 and Beyond - Bill Wolff, Katherin Fitzpatrick, and Rene Youssef
- The Challenge of Implementing Organizational Learning - Mafalda Stasi
- Yes and Yes-and: Time in the Compshop - Daniel Anderson
- honoria in ciberspazio: the first internet opera - honoria starbuck
- A Sustainable Culture: John Slatin's Ludic Pedagogy - Albert Rouzie and Ray Watkins
- Anna Slatin Interview
- Call for Papers
- Past Issues
Spring 2008: "The Commons"
Anyone who’s ever attended a class or taught in the humanities has experienced a cultural commons, be it students sharing their writing, professors sharing their favorite works of literature, philosophers sharing and debating ideas. Sharing is part of what makes us human. Technologies have facilitated this sharing in a variety of ways (the quill and pen allowed a voice to traverse time and space; the printing press allowed quick and reliable reproduction of texts), but digital media present a special case. Through networking technologies and digital transmission, we now have available an historically unprecedented capacity to share our cultural resources and to contribute to what humanists have called “tradition” since the ancient Greek era of oratorical and sometimes print culture. No longer restricted to dusty tomes in library stacks, tradition is now dispersed and rewritten on websites, blogs, in wikis, on video- and audio-sharing sites, through podcasts, and even over portable devices such as PDAs.
The digitized commons poses unique challenges. Citizens and legislators must devise, follow, and enforce laws that protect as well as promote cultural production. Lawrence Lessig’s interview in this issue traces his intellectual development from a concerned netizen to an advocate for new forms of government that will better serve the cultural efflorescence made possible by new technologies. Teachers and students must invent, enact, and explore possibilities for inquiry and cultural production. The contributors to our Pedagogy Symposium (Stuart Selber, Johndan Johnson-Eilola, Alan Liu, Cedrick May, and Robert Scholes), together with their respondent (Jim Brown) offer practical efforts at humanistic education in the protean, digitally networked cultural commons.
Justin Tremel
Mark Garrett Longaker
Lawrence Lessig with Justin Tremel
by Johndan Johnson-Eilola and Stuart A. Selber
Literature+
by Alan Liu
Video Production and Distribution for the Composition and Literature Classroom
by Cedrick May
The Modernist Journals Project
by Robert Scholes
Response: (Re)Make it New
by James J. Brown, Jr.

