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| title | chunk | source | category | tags | date_saved | instance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Good Faith Collaboration | 2/2 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Faith_Collaboration | reference | science, encyclopedia | 2026-05-05T06:18:03.829362+00:00 | kb-cron |
== Reception == William S. Kowinski, in a review of the book for the North Coast Journal published in 2010, wrote that "What this book does well is describe how Wikipedia works and what issues have arisen... this may remain the best opportunity for learning about this remarkable project." Cory Doctorow, in a 2010 review on the Boing Boing portal, said that Reagle "offers a compelling case that Wikipedia's most fascinating and unprecedented aspect isn't the encyclopedia itself – rather, it's the collaborative culture that underpins it: brawling, self-reflexive, funny, serious, and full-tilt committed to the project". The book was also reviewed by R. Stuart Geiger for The Wikipedia Signpost that year. He commended the author on his involvement in the Wikipedia project, which has allowed him to create a work that "goes well beyond most accounts written about Wikipedia, insisting on studying Wikipedians both on and in their own terms." Geiger concluded that the book "is well-written, well-sourced, and neutral; something I'd recommend for my mother." He also noted that the book had been praised by the then-director of the Wikimedia Foundation, Sue Gardner, on her blog. Humphreys Lee, reviewing the book for the Journal of Communication in 2011, noted that it is a welcome addition to the body of ethnographic literature about new digital media. She noted that the book focuses on the production, not consumption of Wikipedia and stressed the historical importance of the wiki technology which was necessary for the development of the Wikipedia project. She concluded that the book "is an important contribution to understanding the collaborative culture of media production and the open content community". Jeff Loveland, in his review published in 2011 in Annals of Science, wrote that the book has "one major weakness, namely in historical contextualization", but praised it as a de facto introduction to Wikipedia, exploring the "insightful and worthwhile" topic of ethnography of Wikipedia. Paul Youngquist, in his 2011 review for symploke, noted that the book is worthy to recommend "to anyone interested in the history of infotech and its new forms of collective agency". José-Carlos Redondo-Olmedilla, reviewing the book for The Information Society in 2012, wrote "Reagle's book on the culture of Wikipedia gives an accurate account of this sociocultural and sociotechnological phenomenon that Wikipedia is" and concluded that "it is definitely an excellent read and an accomplished exercise of transparency". Olivia Auxier, writing a review for the International Journal of Communication in 2013, noted that "Reagle’s book is mostly descriptive but does offer some theoretical ideas about the issues Wikipedia faced early on and that it will continue to confront". Mayo Fuster Morell, in her 2013 review in the Information, Communication & Society, commended Reagle's book for pioneering the study of Wikipedia using an ethnographic approach, "particularly in terms of its cultural and historical specificity". Craig Hight, in his 2013 review for Media International Australia, concluded that "this is a detailed and persuasive analysis of the nature of the Wikipedia community, and a valuable addition to critical and reflective accounts of the technological, social and political dimensions of contemporary media platforms". Piotr Konieczny, reviewing the book for Social Forces in 2014, wrote that while the book might not address all possible aspects of the Wikipedia project, it "has earned itself a place of a classic in the studies of Wikipedia, and, likely, in the bookshelves dedicated to the open content communities and online ethnography".
== See also == Bibliography of Wikipedia Common Knowledge?: A monograph about Wikipedia, written by the internet researcher Dariusz Jemielniak
== References ==
== External links == Good Faith Collaboration in the Library of Congress Online Catalog Online copy of Good Faith Collaboration—Web-based open content book released under a CC-BY-NC-SA license Official website at MIT Press Direct Good Faith Collaboration at the Internet Archive Good Faith Collaboration at Google Books Further reviews: James Grimmelmann, Good Faith Scholarship, JOTWELL (October 13, 2010) (reviewing Joseph Michael Reagle Jr., Good Faith Collaboration: The Culture of Wikipedia) Chamberlain, Susanna. Good faith collaboration: The culture of Wikipedia [Book Review]. Communication, Politics & Culture, Vol. 44, No. 2, 2011: 133-134. Maceviciute E. (2011). Review of: Reagle, Joseph Michael. Good faith collaboration: the culture of Wikipedia. Cambridge (Mas.), The MIT Press, 2010. Information Research, 16(3)