Title: The Anatomy of a Digital Object
1The Anatomy of a Digital Object
- Matthew G. Kirschenbaum
- University of Maryland
- e(X)literature
- UCSB, April 2003
2Lets talk about bibliography.
- Bibliography? Isnt that just making lists and
stuff? - Audience yawns and reaches for coffee. After
all, its 900 AM. Plus, hes using PowerPoint.
3Wrong.
- Actually, bibliography is the oldest and most
sophisticated form of media studies we have (says
Kirschenbaum).
4Media studies ca. 1933 . . .
- Bibliography is the study of books as tangible
objects. It examines the materials of which they
are made and the manner in which those materials
are put together. It traces their place and mode
of origin, and the subsequent adventures that
have befallen them. It is not concerned with
their contents in a literary sense, but it is
certainly concerned with the signs and symbols
they contain (apart from their significance) for
the manner in which these marks are written or
impressed is a very relevant bibliographical
fact. W. W. Greg
5Properly speaking, there are three kinds of
bibliography
- Enumerative Bibliography
- Analytical or Physical Bibliography
- Descriptive Bibliography
6Enumerative Bibliography
- This is the making lists branch of
bibliography. - The first enumerative bibliographer may have been
Callimachus of Cyrene (ca. 310-240 B.C.), who
compiled a 120-volume catalog of the library at
Alexandria. -
7Analytical or Physical Bibliography
- Forensic examination of book-object for material
evidence of its own production. - Foundation of textual editing and literary
criticism. - For example, decoding the five different
compositors who set the type for the first
edition of Hawthornes novel Fanshawe.
8Descriptive Bibliography
- Outgrowth of analytical bibliography.
- Rigorous, standardized, many would even want to
say scientific description of books as physical
objects. - Fredson Bowers, Principles of Bibliographical
Description (Princeton UP, 1949).
9Quoth Bowers
- Many a literary critic has investigated the
past ownership and mechanical condition of his
second-hand automobile, or the pedigree and
training of his dog, more thoroughly than he has
looked into the qualifications of the text on
which his critical theories rest.
10OK, Im awake now, but . . .
- Whats all this got to do with electronic
literature, much less e(X)literature?
11Well, electronic literatures done a good job
with enumerative bibliography . . .
12. . . but our use of analytical and descriptive
bibliography is not very far along at all.
- Kirschenbaum thinks this has something to do
with the fact that until fairly recently, the
widespread prejudice was that electronic objects
were simply immaterial (presumably because you
cant reach out and touch them). Kirschenbaum
calls this the haptic fallacy.
13Anyway, electronic objects exist in space and
time . . .
14And they are to a certain extent self-documenting
. . .
15 - . . . but in the electronic literature community
we lack a sophisticated vocabulary for expressing
the synchronic and diachronic changes that inform
the material make-up of digital objects.
16Will the real afternoon please stand up?
- First edition of afternoon (1987, Mac) and third
edition (1992, PC).
17And bibliography can change all that?
- Yes, I think it can. And PAD is just the group
to do it. So for the rest of my time, Im going
to concentrate on descriptive bibliography, and
work towards some principles of computational
description.
18In Bowers words, descriptive bibliography seeks
to . . .
- Furnish a detailed, analytical record of the
physical characteristics of a book which would
simultaneously serve as a trustworthy source of
identification and as a medium to bring an absent
book before a readers eyes (vii). - Hmm, kind of sounds like metadata, doesnt it?
19Put another way (still Bowers)
- The concern of the descriptive bibliographer is
to examine every available copy of an edition of
a book in order to describe in bibliographical
terms the characteristics of an ideal copy of
this edition, to distinguish between issues and
variants of the edition, to explain and describe
the printing and textual history of the edition,
and finally to arrange it in a correct and
logical relationship to other editions (6).
20But bear in mind (with Bowers)
- The description and analysis contained in a
bibliography is not intended to exist on a
factual basis as an end in itself. Bibliography
would be a limited science indeed if collection
of external facts were its sole reason for
existence. True bibliography is the bridge to
textual, which is to say literary, criticism. The
history of an authors book is an intimate part
of the literary history of that author (8-9).
21Bowers terminology for hand-printed books
- Edition
- Impression
- Issue
- State
- Ideal Copy
22My very provisional terminology for describing
digital objects
- Release
- Version
- Layer
- Object
- State
- Instance
- Copy
23Consider as an example David Blairs hypermedia
WAXWEB . . .
- Extruded from his 1991 film, Wax, or the
Discovery of Television Among the Bees (90 min). - In 1993, Wax became the first feature-length film
to be distributed over the Internets
high-bandwidth M-Bone.
24WAXWEB (1994-2003) http//www.waxweb.org
- Storyspace
- MOO
- 2000 HTML nodes and 25,000 links
- 4800 JPEG image files
- 560 MPEG video files
- 2200 WAV audio files
- 300 VRML renderings
- Final ? CD-ROM
25Layer
- A layer comprises all elements of an electronic
work that are both computationally compatible and
functionally integrated. When one or more
elements are ported such that the whole is no
longer computationally compatible or functionally
integrated, then a new layer is created.
26Version
- Layers can be distinguished by assigning them
versions. - David Blair versions WAXWEB as follows 1.0 was
the first web version, with the html constructed
by the MOO, using text, picture, movie 2.0 added
the old vrml there are two versions up now... the
output of the MOO, which I started to work with
in 95 before finally just tossing it out,
putatively called 3.0 alpha. The finished version
is just Waxweb.
27Release
- Different releases of the work are all
computationally compatible with one another, but
they are not functionally integrated.
28Object
- A generic identifier for some discrete digital
entity, such as a file (and a file can itself be
defined as a named collection of data that
persists over time).
29State
- A state refers to the computational composition
of an object in some particular data format.
30Instance
- An instance refers to a particular object in a
particular state as presented in a particular
software environment.
31Copy
- A copy refers to one precise and particular
instance of one particular state of an object.
(If I download an image in JPEG format from the
Web, the copy my browser caches is ontologically
distinct (even though it is computationally
identical) to the copy on the server.)
32Putting it all together . . .
-
- In the slide that follows, one single digital
object (this frame of video from the original Wax
film) is presented in two separate states
(RealVideo and JPEG) and four separate instances,
all distributed across three layers and versions
of the work. (Note that this display does not
necessarily include all instances or states of
the object.)
33(No Transcript)
34Very nice, but isnt the library science already
there? METS and all that?
- No, I dont think so. As I understand them, METS
(and other things like it) do not help with the
problem of expressing relationships between
multiple versions and states of an individual
work. This is whats at the heart of the
bibliographical enterprise, and its a
perspective thats essential for PAD. - Oh, and about that word work . . .
35Exactly what is the work here? Either one? Both
together?
36The other CVS . . .
- Which is why I think we can also learn a lot
from developers tools, such as the open source
Concurrent Versions System (CVS) - A version control system maintains an organized
set of all the versions of files that are made
over time. Version control systems allow people
to go back to previous revisions of individual
files, and to compare any two revisions to view
the changes between them. In this way, version
control keeps a historically accurate and
retrievable log of a file's revisions. - http//www.cvshome.org
37Like Howard, Bowers understood the importance of
standards . . .
- It is necessary in the extreme for
bibliographers (like chemists or mathematicians)
to agree on a standard and uniform system of
notation, to be followed in all its details and
to be maintained rigidly in their works. Personal
prejudice against one or other device should not
be permitted to interfere with the adoption of
all details of a standard system (24).
38Recommendations for PAD
- Recognize the value of the critical knowledge
analytical and descriptive bibliography afford
for traditional literary studies - Help foster analytical and descriptive
bibliographical practices for the electronic
literature community by developing and
disseminating standardized principles of
computational description (not necessarily mine
here!) for the digital objects that matter to us - Tightly couple any such principles of
computational description to our technical
metadata and encoding practices.
39Shameless self-promotion
- Kirschenbaum, Editing the Interface Textual
Studies and First-Generation Electronic Objects.
TEXT 14 (2002) 15-51. - Kirschenbaum, Mechanisms New Media and the New
Textuality (forthcoming, MIT Press).