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session 05 - organizing knowledge and classification systems.md

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General: Have a second look at your sources

Tools

Folksonomies and Tagging:

  • very common in contemporary research practice: Zotero, Diigo, LibraryThing

For historians and those doing archival research

  • how to document and store your archival finds

Classification and power

To watch:

Further reading

  • Batch, Yamen, and Maryati Mohd. Yusof. 2015. “Organizing Information in Medical Blogs Using a Hybrid Taxonomy-Folksonomy Approach.” J. Web Eng. 14 (3-4): 181–95. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2871264.2871265.
  • Gherab-Martin, Karim. 2011. “Digital Repositories, Folksonomies, and Interdisciplinary Research: New Social Epistemology Tools.” The Handbook of Emergent Technologies in Social Research, 231.
  • Library of Congress. 2017. The Card Catalog: Books, Cards, and Literary Treasures. San Francisco: Chronicle Books.
  • Luhmann, Niklas. 1981. “Kommunikation mit Zettelkästen.” In Öffentliche Meinung und sozialer Wandel / Public Opinion and Social Change, edited by Prof Dr med Horst Baier, Dr Hans Mathias Kepplinger, and Dr phil Kurt Reumann, 222–28. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften. http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-322-87749-9_19.
  • Schiltz, Michael, Frederik Truyen, and Hans Coppens. 2007. “Cutting the Trees of Knowledge: Social Software, Information Architecture and Their Epistemic Consequences.” Thesis Eleven 89 (1): 94–114. http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0725513607076135.
  • Wichowski, Alexis. 2009. “Survival of the Fittest Tag: Folksonomies, Findability, and the Evolution of Information Organization.” First Monday 14 (5). http://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/2447.
  • Zins, Chaim, and Plácida L.V.A.C. Santos. 2011. “Mapping the Knowledge Covered by Library Classification Systems.” Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 62 (5): 877–901. doi:10.1002/asi.21481.