Web Annotation as Conversation and Interruption

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2018-01-01

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Abstract

This article showcases both the conventional and disruptive features of web annotation as media practice. To do so, we orchestrated a series of thematic exchanges about media practice, specifically those associated with openness and politics. We then publicly invited responses to our initial manuscript via the online web annotation platform Hypothes.is. The two thematic conversations inspired an ensemble of public contributors to join us in ongoing discussion for over a month, layering atop our source text over 100 original web annotations, creating a laminated and multi-authored document. Following this shared activity, we reflected upon our experience and the generated content, and authored a complementary synthesis that explores the tenor and tensions of web annotation as a disruptive media practice, as well as web annotation as performative publishing. Alongside public contributors, we worked a cyclical dialectic of process and product, discussing web annotation as disruptive media practice by publicly practicing web annotation as an act of co-created disruption. It is our hope that this experiment-turned-article, part collaboratively authored dialogue and part post-hoc synthesis, models and begins to theorize new and disruptive media practices for research design, peer review, and scholarly communication.

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10.1080/14682753.2017.1362168

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Kalir, JH, and J Dean (2018). Web Annotation as Conversation and Interruption. Media Practice and Education, 19(1). pp. 18–29. 10.1080/14682753.2017.1362168 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31303.

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Kalir

Remi Kalir

Research Analyst II

Remi Kalir, PhD, is Associate Director of Faculty Development and Applied Research at Duke University Learning Innovation & Lifetime Education. He is also Associate Director of the interdisciplinary Center for Applied Research and Design in Transformative Education (CARADITE).

He is the author of two books published by MIT Press: Re/Marks on Power: How Annotation Inscribes History, Literacy, and Justice (2025) and Annotation (2021).

Much of Kalir's research—which spans literacy education, the learning sciences, and teacher education—examines how annotation facilitates social, collaborative, and justice-directed learning. His scholarship has appeared in the Journal of Literacy Research, Information and Learning Sciences, Research in the Teaching of English, Distance Education, English Journal, and English Leadership Quarterly, among other journals. His writing about the social significance of annotation has also appeared in The Hechinger Report, We Need Diverse Books, LSE Impact Blog, and Commonplace, among other outlets.

Kalir's research has been supported through multiple positions and projects, including as Scholar in Residence with Hypothesis (2020-21), OER Research Fellow with the Open Education Group (2017-18), and as a National Science Foundation Data Consortium Fellow (2016).

Prior to joining Duke, Kalir was Associate Professor of Learning, Design, and Technology at the University of Colorado Denver School of Education and Human Development. He earned his PhD in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.


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