Sunday, September 29, 2013

Collaboration and Openness in Professor Martha Nell Smith’s Talk on Editing


In the master’s class at Wayne State University, Professor Martha Nell Smith gave us personal insight on her experiences as an editor. I was mostly intrigued by two concepts Professor Smith discussed, that I see as key  terms in regards to where the humanities is headed: collaboration and openness.  

Professor Smith highlights the importance of collaboration in the editing process, including digital work. In producing digital archives, Professor Smith found herself working with other scholars; she noted how much she enjoyed doing so and even made sure to point out that most of her books are co-authored. Her likeness for collaboration possibly stems from her belief that the tools that scholars produce are not more important than the people who produce them. Respecting the hard labor and good work of editors is a good thing, and worshipping the tools they create is not. She takes a very humane approach to the editing process, making it known that as people get their hands “dirty” in messy archives, even the most principled editors will make mistakes. Professor Smith recalls a time when her own graduate student caught a mistake in one of her works. A second “pair of eyes” is fundamental then in the editing process. Collaboration is important because the more “eyes” you have, the more accurate the editing process will be. She calls editors “stewards” who owe it to readers, and those becoming acquainted with editing, to make the editorial process “transparent,” and not pretend to know things they don’t actually know. In her article, “The Human Touch Software of the Highest Order,” Professor Smith discusses the different attitudes towards editing. She insists that even with collaborative efforts, editors need not agree on every aspect of the process. She says, “Each can report what she sees and audiences benefit from multiple viewpoints”(Smith 14). This seems to make collaborative efforts appear more friendly rather than competitive. I think better works can be produced this way.

Alongside her discussion of the editing process, Professor Smith discussed her current work-in-progress, the Emily Dickinson archive.  Her goal is to create an archive that allows for an open “space of knowledge exchange for a networked world of scholars, students, and readers.” One of her aims is to make this archive open for public access. I especially appreciated her outlook on this project, one that does not see knowledge as restricted. Hardvard University has asked her to sell her archive and others urge her to make it a “closed” space. Professor Smith, however, argues that Emily Dickinson’s manuscript is already open because these matters are of public record. She simply doesn’t understand why access to Dickinson’s manuscripts should be restricted. I completely agree. Openness is a key value to uphold as the humanities becomes more and more “digital.” Scholars and non-scholars alike can contribute to the growth of knowledge.

1 comment:

  1. Hi Nabilah. Openness is good but I thought at the master class that how could she manage all that without paying by no one. I'm maybe seculized as getting older and older, but I still curious this money-related point. Anyway, aside from this, since I have got benefit from Smith's hard work, I should be more generous this openness and collaboration in literary study. Also, the master class and your post changed my idea that humanities studies is done by individual.

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