id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_yi7kjgqycfbf7nsbtjsyo6asym Andrew Lopez On Scholarly Communication and the Digital Humanities: An Interview with Kathleen Fitzpatrick 2015 .htm text/html 11395 775 70 The following interview between Rowland and Fitzpatrick took place on March 7, 2013, at Temple University, before Fitzpatrick gave a lecture at the Center for the Humanities entitled "The Humanities in and for the Digital Age." It provides an introduction to her work, her two books The Anxiety of Obsolescence: the American Novel in the Age of Television and Planned Obsolescence: Publishing, Technology, and the Future of the Academy, as well as a discussion about the meaning of the digital humanities, the crisis in publishing, the history of peer review, and what's in store for the future of scholarly communication. She suggests that the mode of the Internet's distribution of attention – rather than having the sort of deep focus that long form print has long had, the ability to think in nonlinear, connected, more distributed ways – is highlighting different kinds of skills that students and workers today really need to develop in order to cope with multiple information streams at multiple times. ./cache/work_yi7kjgqycfbf7nsbtjsyo6asym.htm ./txt/work_yi7kjgqycfbf7nsbtjsyo6asym.txt