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Writing demanded such isolation for French novelist Marcel
Proust that he corked the walls of his bedroom and essentially told everyone
but his housekeeper to buzz off. Marcel, meet McKenzie Wark.
A cutting-edge online author in New York, Mr. Wark invites
perfect strangers to interrupt his ideas with their own scribbling in the
digital margins. If they make a good point, Wark amends his book. In the
spring, the evolving text will be published on paper, weaving in the Web
comments. Then, the author plans the ultimate surrender: Anyone will be
allowed into the online version to dabble and delete at will.
Wark may be offering a glimpse into the future, where
books — particularly non-fiction — become destinations for discussion rather
than dog-eared possessions, and authors take on a more gregarious role.
A shift toward more collaborative forms of writing began
with blogs and Wikipedia, the online editable-by-everyone encyclopedia.
Now technology is pushing the trend further, including a new word processor
released by Google. Called Google Docs,
the software acts a lot like Microsoft Word, except that it's accessed
for free online and more than one writer can be in the same file at any
given time. The Silicon Valley-based company sees potential uses as mundane
as a husband and wife's joint shopping list. But hints of grander possibilities
abound: Using the software, seven authors jointly wrote a novel and a group
of textbook writers hammered out an introduction together.
The pros and cons of collaboration
"Collaboration is increasingly a part of our everyday
lives, and rarely do we work on something in a vacuum," says Jen Mazzon,
a senior product marketing manager with Google. "Because [Google
Docs] makes collaboration easier, people might be more likely to share
things and to get input from person x, y, z who they frankly before may
not have bothered with."
But as anyone who remembers group projects from their
school days can attest, collaboration can have its pitfalls. Who gets credit
for authorship? How do clashing visions get resolved? And how does the
author prevent the less-informed from mucking everything up? Wikipedia
has struggled particularly with the last question.
Arguing that sometimes the most obnoxious voices drown
out the most informed, one of the site's founders, Larry Sanger announced
this week a breakaway version called Citizendium. Experts, some with PhDs
and others with different qualifications, will be given the power to mediate
disputes and to weed out inaccuracies in this new encyclopedia, or compendium.
Mr. Sanger likens the shift from anarchy to a republic. While Citizendium
represents a small retreat, Sanger still believes in the power of radical
collaboration. He credits open source computer programmers for demonstrating
the greater efficiency of group work over that of lone geniuses.
"If we can manage to teach academics and people who are
used to getting personal credit for their work [this new] way of collaborating,
the result, I think, could very well be revolutionary in a real sense,"
Sanger says. "The result is an enormously efficient, exciting, and productive
method of content development."
For those involved with Wark's book, a theoretical analysis
of video games, the project was also about widening the doors of access
to the writing process and making more transparent the debates that were
once limited to a small circle of editors. "The skills of an editor are
not going to become unimportant; it's just that it is possible that the
few hundred editors that work in publishing in New York City may not be
the only people who have really good opinions about what's worthwhile in
the world," says Jesse Wilbur with The Institute for the Future of the
Book in New York.
An anathema to scholarship?
Some thinkers argue that while collaboration may work
for an online encyclopedia, it's anathema to original works of art or scholarship,
both of which require a point of view and an authorial voice. "Novels,
biography, criticism, political philosophy ... the books that we care about,
those books are going to be in print for a very long time," says Geoffrey
Nunberg, a linguist at the University of California, Berkeley. "The reason
they aren't more jointly offered isn't that we haven't had technology to
do it, it's that books represent a singular point of view."
Take three biographies of Noah Webster and you'll have
three distinct lenses on the man's life, but an amalgam of the three would
say virtually nothing, Mr. Nunberg argues. "When people are using collaborative
tools, they will naturally collaborate to a more neutral, less personal
point of view," he adds. That homogenization kills originality and dulls
a work. "The thing you can say about Wikipedia's articles is that they're
always boring."
Discussions help shape books
For many working in this arena, the excitement of collaboration
comes perhaps less from the spark of the prose and more from the give-and-take
of the discussion around a text. For online writers of the future, "their
work is going to be judged by how interesting the conversation is," says
Mr. Wilbur. That demands a different skill set from authors, some of whom
won't be as comfortable in this new medium.
"You have to be a certain kind of author to do this, and
you have to be able to attract enough people to your site," says Ms. Berinstein.
For writers of these new collaborative works, she says, there's a new version
of the writer's age-old self-doubt: "What if I made a book and nobody came?"
Copyright 2006, The Christian Science Monitor
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