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Dutch Digital Arts (working title) is a book about digital creative expression (i.e. art using computers) in the Netherlands. It will be written from scratch from late 2015 until at least 2017.
We are working on alonglist of topics to include in the book. Add your input!
What does this book cover?
The preparation phase of this book is covered by a start subsidy (grant) fromCreative Industries Fund NL. Because this is public funding, all output will - as much as possible - be published under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike license. Initiator and main contact for this project isSandra Fauconnier, User:Spinster.
All texts in this book are written by a small, independent editorial team. An advisory board of Dutch and international academics, artists, activists and other experts reviews the editorial process and gives advice.
A large part of the editorial process takes place here, transparently, on Wikibooks. For this aspect of the book, contributions, edits and input by any Wikibooks user are very welcome.
Final decisions about the contents and format of this book are taken by the editorial team, with the editor in chief having the last word.
The editorial team hold regular (mostly online) meetings with the goal to divide the work among themselves, finetune current work, and discuss and process the input from the advisory board.
Tasks:
Members:
This book has two counterparts that complement each other: a digital and a physical manifestation.
Texts in this book are edited online on Wikibooks, if that is possible within copyright restrictions.
As much as possible, images for the book will be requested to be released underWikimedia-compatible licenses. Not all rights holders will agree with this. As much as possible though, images for this book will be uploaded toWikimedia Commons.
Where relevant and possible (also within copyright restrictions), texts and images for the book will also be uploaded to theInternet Archive, for preservation purposes.
Next to the digital publication on Wikibooks, a hard copy book will be produced, which will be more extensive and structured than the Wikibooks edition in several ways:
Short articles in the hard copy book will probably be organized chronologically (taking the 'period of activity' of the person/organisation/initiative/artwork into account). The essays will also probably be organized in more or less chronological (and also historically logical) order.