Scholars Who Blog

Earlier this year, Seb Paquet suggested that someone should aggregate the lists of scholars who blog found at the Blogalization wiki, at Crooked Timber, a list on his wiki, a list on delicious, and Jill Walker’s list. Well, it’s a bit late, but here it is: an aggregated list of over 400 scholarly blogs. I know there is a lot missing there, and I guess the next step is to cull from the blogrolls on these blogs to see whether more can be found. It sure would be nice if people would self-organize, though!

There is more I would like to do with this:
* Find people’s names if the blog isn’t anonymous.
* Remove the dead ones.
* Find RSS feeds for those that have them and aggregate the scholars who blog.

(More to come on this…)

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6 Comments

  1. Posted 4/20/2004 at 4:08 am | Permalink

    This is a really good idea but wouldn’t it be better in some kind of database format with lots of user-submitted meta data so I could search for all the UK-based media studies academics for example or everyone who cites Bourdieu as a significant theoretical interest?

  2. Posted 4/20/2004 at 5:00 am | Permalink

    I think you missed PhDWeblogs.net (which is a database, by the way) and I didn’t have time to add http://rhetorica.net/professors_who_blog.htm

    An OPML file and a Bloglines public aggregator of scholars with feeds could be quite useful.

    I believe what we need is an extensible self-organizing markup scheme à la BlogChalking/GeoURL.

  3. Alex
    Posted 4/20/2004 at 10:16 am | Permalink

    I like the idea of a database–particularly of the distributed sort Seb suggests. I don’t like the idea of more work :). But it might be a worthwhile thing to take a shot at.

    I actually had included the PhDWeblogs–just forgot to mention it in the post. It now includes the Rhetorica list as well.

    I started feeding these in to a Bloglines account, and I’m wondering if either an aggregator with 550 blogs or the related OPML file will really be useful to anyone…

  4. Posted 4/21/2004 at 4:13 am | Permalink

    PhDweblogs seems rather erratic – I often have difficulty connecting but it’s the right kind of idea. It could have more database fields though. I think the idea of providing metadata in your site’s own HTML is interesting but since most people don’t change their templates very often it might inhibit take-up if that was the only way to get your site properly included.

  5. Posted 4/21/2004 at 6:43 am | Permalink

    I really think that a database, like PhDweblogs.net, is very useful, but we would be very interested in discussing a broader project, which could include a weblog with several participants.
    The database and the weblog could be based anywhere, preferably in a new domain we would all create from scratch. What do you say?

  6. Posted 4/21/2004 at 9:18 am | Permalink

    I invite you to collect thoughts on this page on my wiki: http://blogselforg.notlong.com/

    I’ve already got a bit written there.

4 Trackbacks

  1. By eCuaderno v.2.0 on 4/21/2004 at 4:45 am

    Blogs de investigadores
    El profesor Alexander Halavais de la Universidad de Buffalo (obtuvo el doctorado con una tesis sobre el efecto Slashdot), ha compilado en una única lista en formato wiki, varios directorios de weblogs de investigadores y profesores universitarios: Scho…

  2. By Seb's Open Research on 4/21/2004 at 11:04 am

    Creating a self-organizing weblog directory
    As everyone has noticed by now, the blogosphere is not very well-organized, and the efforts at organizing it have remained pretty much scattered and fragmentary.

  3. By Brayden King on 4/21/2004 at 3:00 pm

    Scholarly blogging
    On the topic of academic blogs (I’m on a meta-blogging kick) – Alex Halavais has compiled an aggregated list of scholars who blog. As far as I know this is the most extensive list of academic blogs on the net. And look, there I am – right between…

  4. By unmediated on 4/23/2004 at 1:06 am

    Creating a self-organizing weblog directory
    As everyone has noticed by now, the blogosphere is rather tricky to get around in, especially for newcomers, and the efforts at mapping it have remained pretty much scattered and fragmentary. Even if you restrict your view to the small space of academi…

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