Kindle for the Academic
November 3, 2009
By Alex Golub

E-book readers are all the rage these days -- from scenes of Oprah's
audience ecstatically receiving complimentary Kindles to models of
Sony's new eBook readers, this long-promised technology looks like it
has finally arrived. Much has been written about the effect that e-books
will have on the publishing industry (including scholarly publication),
education, and its niche in the ecosystem of Extremely Complicated
Handheld Devices Our Students Understand. But how useful are these
devices for academics and how do they fit into our own personal
scholarly ecosystems?
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I recently got to spend two months up close and personal with a newly
purchased Kindle from Amazon when I spent my summer conducting two
months of fieldwork in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. Over that time,
and for about a month before hand, I had a chance to read both academic
and nonacademic work on the Kindle. Based on that experience, my overall
impression is that while the Kindle and other ebook readers might not
quite be reader for prime time, they are going to be an important part
of academic work in the future.

Let’s face it: at heart, the Kindle is designed to let you read mystery
novels, not academic books. It is small, light, and has terrific battery
life. In this respect, Jeff Bezos has succeeded in his goal of creating
a device that "just lets you read." But for an academic like me, whose
casual reading list consists of books that normal humans find
pointlessly opaque, does it matter than I can now read anywhere? The
answer, I think, is Yes. The Kindle is remarkably freeing -- suddenly
your porch or the beach is a workspace (this is particularly important
to me, since I live in Hawaii and spend much of my time on my lanai). I
never realized how much reading I did at my computer until I had the
ability to read somewhere else. Admittedly, some might consider the
workspaceization of their entire lives a minus rather than a plus, but
as academics when has our life ever been separate from our work?

Academics often have a different experience of reading from that of
regular readers -- our books are expensive, they are odd sizes, we
intend to use them our entire lives and are careful about their
condition, and we travel everywhere with an elaborate array of
mechanical pencils, sticky notes, and highlighters to read them. The
physical experience of reading on a Kindle solves many of these problems
for us. Over the summer I read Pevear and Volokhonsky’s translation of
War and Peace, something that I had tried and failed to accomplish
before simply because the book was too damn large to handle. Kindles can
be held over one's head while in bed or on the couch without tiring the
arms, a key consideration for academics who 1) read everywhere, all the
time and 2) have no upper body strength.

There are drawbacks to reading on the Kindle, of course. First, it is
not a book. If one of the main reasons you read books is feel and smell
the pages in order to gratify your self-image as a "reader" or
"intellectual," then the Kindle is probably not for you. But if, as an
academic, you are interested in the content of the book you are reading,
then the Kindle's lack of pages offers a different set of challenges.
Most obviously, you must give up being able to remember that the passage
you are looking for is on the left or right hand side of the page. More
substantively, though, the Kindle makes moving back and forth between
endnotes, body text, and bibliographic material a tremendous pain -- a
key concern for scholars who read by moving through the main text of a
book and its scholarly apparatus simultaneously. And I must admit, while
it’s nice to be able to search the contents of your book, I somehow feel
that flipping through it is a method of browsing that has some obscure
but important utility that the Kindle hasn't yet duplicated.

Most importantly, many academics add value to their library by writing
in their books. While the Kindle’s built-in underlining feature does a
much less-suck job of marking up texts than I originally expected, the
markup features of the device are simply not as good as paper. While
underlining may be fine for some, I am sure that many academics are like
me in that they have their own complex and idiosyncratic method of
annotating books which features complex circling, numbering, bracketing,
and so forth -- none of which is available for the Kindle. And of course
if the things you read feature charts, graphs, or even pictures, the
Kindle's small screen will render them illegible.

Of course, you can do more than just read books on your Kindle. You can
email PDFs to it, put .doc files on it, and so forth. This makes reading
journal articles a snap -- although it will be even more of a snap when
we can just go to JSTOR and click the "send this article to my eBook
reader" link. It saves us from dragging around lengthy MAs and
dissertations to read, although of course we can't mark up and then hand
back the drafts of our students' work that we read on the Kindle.

In fact, I must admit that I think the book as an artifact is already
dead. The Internet has created a used book market in which different
versions, printings, pressings, covers of books matter not at all. Each
book is, in a way, a replica of all the other books of the same title.
Getting "reading copies" of books is now so easy that the e-book feels
like the nail in the coffin, not a game-changer.

As academics, we often read extremely specialized books printed in very
short runs in places that are, in general, very far from where we live.
The Kindle really helps "long tail" readers like us because it lets you
download a sample chapter, and then purchase, download, and read a new
title, something that is tremendously exciting for academics, whose
books often don't have a "look inside" feature on the Amazon Web site
(or Google Books, or wherever), and who otherwise might waste time and
money getting a book shipped to them simply so they can verify whether
it is worth reading or not. In an age when our libraries are more and
more cash-strapped, e-book distribution offers a lot of hope for niche
publishing -- and academic publishing is nothing if not niche.

Except textbooks. I have to admit I am scared silly by the idea of a
generation of students so alienated from material they are supposed to
be immersed in that they rent digital textbooks that they do not intend
to keep, cannot dog ear and underline, and otherwise feel totally
alienated from. Even the current trend of students not underlining in
books so as to preserve their resale value strikes me as appalling.
Taking ownership of your education -- and indeed, just learning how to
read closely -- means making your books part of your physical
environment. In an era when you thought criminally overpriced textbooks
full of uselessly pretty pictures and pre-chewed content was the
absolute nadir of education, the Campus Full Of Kindles demonstrates we
still have lower to sink. If, that is, the Kindles alienate students
from their libraries rather than empowering them to immerse themselves
in them.

And this brings us to the crux of the issue: Max Weber once remarked
that scholars are the only remaining technical specialists who own their
own means of production: their library. The Kindle changes this. The
Kindle is the inkjet printer of the 21st century: the business model is
to give you the device for free and then charge you for refills. Sure,
the Kindle promises liberation to traveling bookworms, who can now
travel without an emergency stock of extremely heavy extra reading in
their bags. This space-saving feature offers even more respite for
academics who find the book to oxygen ratio in their over-packed offices
dangerously low. But then again, books are visible in a way e-books are
not. I don't know about you, but one big consequence of developing an
electric library of PDFs and book is that I forget what is in it,
something that is harder to do when your books are there in the room
with you, on an easily-eyeball-able shelf. And I, at least, am reluctant
to discard a book I have marked up no matter how ubiquitous replacement
copies are: My markings add value to my library.

Fonte: http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2009/11/03/golub Powered by
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