On 7/4/12 1:04 AM, Andreas Kolbe wrote:
What would a Wikipedia look like that did not make use of press sources? It
would look a hell of a lot more like an encyclopedia. Thousands of silly
arguments would never arise. Thousands of apposite criticisms of Wikipedia
would never arise. These are good things.

Unfortunately, such a Wikipedia would also have vastly impoverished
coverage of popular culture and current affairs. The articles on Lady Gaga
and Barack Obama would be years behind events; the articles on the Japan
earthquakes, which I believe Wikipedia was widely praised for, would only
now begin to be written, articles on many towns and villages would lack
colour and detail.


It's an intriguing idea, and I agree with the general principle of reducing reliance on sources with less gestation time, of which newspapers are the biggest offender. I do tend to apply it in an as-alternatives-are-available fashion, and to many kinds of sources. For example, citing a recent academic conference paper may be justified if no synthesizing source is available, but there are dangers to cobbling together a new synthesis out of a dozen conference papers that may or may not be representative of majority views in a field, that may now be obsolete in ways unbeknownst to the reader, etc. Better to cite a proper book or survey article, if one is available.

A problem with avoiding newspapers entirely, added to those you mention, is that we'd even lose many things that aren't that recent. Especially in their more "summary" pieces such as obituaries and biopics, newspapers (and newsmagazines) fill in a lot of fairly uncontroversial information on more minor, but potentially still important, people and events. For the ancient world, that information is compiled fairly exhaustively in academic sources; you can find at least a three-sentence biography of every attested figure in some kind of specialist encyclopedia, e.g. the impressively comprehensive _Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire_. But for 20th-century figures that's often not the case. For example, I've written a number of articles on minor political figures (a mayor of Houston, say) primarily sourced from obituaries in major newspapers, e.g. the NYT's obituary section. For what they are, they are usually reliable enough: they provide some dates, a summary of offices held, and a brief mention of why the person is known. For famous figures, there are usually better sources, but for minor figures the alternatives are often more like primary sources, e.g. the state or municipal archives, or not including an article at all.

-Mark


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