Cats, Carpenters, and Accountants: Bibliographical Foundations of Information Science

Cats, Carpenters, and Accountants: Bibliographical Foundations of Information Science

by Wayne de Fremery
Cats, Carpenters, and Accountants: Bibliographical Foundations of Information Science

Cats, Carpenters, and Accountants: Bibliographical Foundations of Information Science

by Wayne de Fremery

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Overview

An expansive case for bibliography as infrastructure in information science.

Cats, Carpenters, and Accountants argues that bibliography serves a foundational role within information science as infrastructure, and like all infrastructures, it needs and deserves attention. Wayne de Fremery’s thoughtful provocation positions bibliography as a means to serve the many ends pursued by information scientists. He explains that bibliographic practices, such as enumeration and description, lie at the heart of knowledge practices and cultural endeavors, but these kinds of infrastructures are difficult to see. In this book, he reveals them and the ways that they formulate information and meaning, artificial intelligence, and human knowledge.

Drawing on scholarship from areas as diverse as data science, machine learning, Korean poetry, and the history of bibliography, de Fremery makes the case for understanding bibliography as a generative mode of accounting for what has been received as data, what he calls “carpentry-accounting.” Referencing a well-known debate in the Anglo-American bibliographical tradition that features a willful cat, he suggests that bibliography and bibliographers are intentionally marginal figures who, paradoxically, perform foundational work in the service of the diverse disciplinary ends that formulate, however loosely, information science as a field. When we attend to the marginal but essential work of accounting for what humankind has fashioned as recorded knowledge, it becomes easier to consider the ways that human accounts can serve and, sometimes, injure us. Relevant to scholars and students from the sciences to the humanities, Cats, Carpenters, and Accountants is a highly original argument for bibliography as a marginal but foundationally powerful force shaping information science as a field and the ways that we know.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262377973
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 05/07/2024
Series: History and Foundations of Information Science
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 296
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Wayne de Fremery is Professor of Information Science and Entrepreneurship at Dominican University of California, where he also directs the Françoise O. Lepage Center for Global Innovation.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Wayne de Fremery’s critically sophisticated work makes a major interdisciplinary contribution, arguing for the (surprisingly central) role of bibliography in contemporary information practices. Full of timely and provocative insights.”
—Johanna Drucker, Breslauer Professor of Bibliographical Studies, Emerita, UCLA; author of Inventing the Alphabet and Visualization and Interpretation
 
“De Fremery returns bibliography to the center of information science with astonishing analysis and deep insight.”
— Ronald E. Day, Professor, Indiana University
 
“This book is an incisive critical reflection on the problems of designing digital technologies because de Fremery has such a deep practical understanding of book and text technologies. Toolsets for organizing and exchanging what Ernest Boeckh long ago called ‘the knowledge of what is known’ are always also ‘more (or less) conspicuous about what they leave out’ (117).  Because ‘making and building are the best kinds of philosophizing' (107) , text technologies evolved (and text technologists learned) to exploit that conspicuous privilege. De Fremery argues that digital technologies can, should, and (he clearly believes) will learn to do the same.”   
—Jerome McGann, Professor, University of Virginia

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