Seeking to address ongoing concerns within this growing field, the book is now open-access and interactive, allowing the discussion to continue.
Kathleen Fitzpatrick's contributions to the collection are “The Humanities, Done Digitally”,[8] and “Beyond Metrics: Community Authorization and Open Peer Review”.
[9] In her book, Generous Thinking: The University and the Public Good (2018), Kathleen Fitzpatrick explores the "ways that scholars might connect and communicate with a range of off-campus communities about our shared interests and concerns.
"[2] In her book Planned Obsolescence (2011), Kathleen Fitzpatrick describes the technological crisis facing scholarly work within the context of digital communication.
She explores the relationship between digital communication and the future of academic publishing, and argues for a new way of working that would give equal weight to online and print publications.