Butterfly Hunt

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This is Butterfly Hunt:

Ernesto Priego's Selected Links and Digital Traces.

Welcome to my journeys into endless scrolling. This is my digital scrapbook.

I curate this ongoing selection of links, words, sounds and images. All shared content is attributed and has been postmarked and permalinked and should be credited accordingly. The contents of this site are shared under Academic Fair Use.

All work here is also shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. Full licensing conditions here.

If there's no credit given it means I am the author of the photo/video/image/text/track. Posts of my authorship reflect my views and not those of any past, present or future employers, publishers or sponsors.

I have borrowed the title "Butterfly Hunt" from Walter Benjamin's section of the same name in Berlin Childhood Around 1900. Thank you for following.

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"What is interesting is always interconnection. Not the primacy of this over that, which has never any meaning." -Michel Foucault , 1982

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

"I Smell Smoke": Blogging as an Endangered Species | HASTAC

Where I mourn the closing of The Panelists. 

Posted at 12:06pm Permalink ∞ Tags: comics studies comics scholarship blogging academia université sans condition publishing impact digital publishing scholarly communications digital preservation digital sustainability blogs comics the panelists monetisation pay a blogger day

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Tumbleroll

End Note

This tumblelog is curated by Ernesto Priego and is powered by Tumblr.You are free to reblog or share in other ways what I post here, but how you do it remains your responsibility. Responsible sharers care about licensing, attribution and reciprocal linking. We are all thinking collectively, but it's not fair to profit individually from the collective's efforts. The theme was designed by Bill Israel, and he deserves full credit for it.

["Here words have presence only in so much as they are (literally) illumined from behind, just as we attain identity only retroactively, through a kind of perpetual process of catching up to ourselves". -Keep, McLaughlin and Parmar, 1993-2000]

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