Foreword: The Web as Counterpart - Steve Jones
Introduction - Niels Brügger & Ian Milligan
Part 01: The Web and Historiography
Chapter 1: Historiography and the Web - Ian Milligan
Chapter 2: Understanding the Archived Web as a Historical Source -
Niels Brügger
Chapter 3: Existing Web Archives - Peter Webster
Chapter 4: Periodizing web archiving: Biographical, event-based,
national and autobiographical traditions - Richard Rogers
Part 02: Theoretical and Methodological Reflections
Chapter 5: Web History in Context - Valérie Schafer & Benjamin G.
Thierry
Chapter 6: Science and Technology Studies Approaches to Web History
- Francesca Musiani & Valérie Schafer
Chapter 7: Theorizing the Uses of the Web - Ralph Schroeder
Chapter 8: Ethical considerations for web archives and web history
research - Stine Lomborg
Chapter 9: Collecting Primary Sources from Web Archives: A Tale of
Scarcity and Abundance - Federico Nanni
Chapter 10: Network Analysis for Web History - Michael Stevenson &
Anat Ben-David
Chapter 11: Quantitative Web History methods - Anthony Cocciolo
Chapter 12: Computational Methods for Web History - Anat Ben-David
& Adam Amram
Chapter 13: Visualizing Historical Web Data - Justin Joque
Part 03: Technical and Structural Dimensions of Web History
Chapter 14: Adding the Dimension of Time to HTTP - Michael L.
Nelson & Herbert Van de Sompel
Chapter 15: Hypertext Before the Web - or, What the Web Could Have
Been - Belinda Barnet
Chapter 16: A historiography of the hyperlink: Periodizing the web
through the changing role of the hyperlink - Anne Helmond
Chapter 17: How Search Shaped and Was Shaped by the Web - Alexander
Halavais
Chapter 18: Making the Web Meaningful: A History of Web Semantics -
Lindsay Poirier
Chapter 19: Browsers and Browser Wars - Marc Weber
Chapter 20: Emergence of the Mobile Web - Gerard Goggin
Part 04: Platforms on the Web
Chapter 21: Wikipedia - Andy Famiglietti
Chapter 22: A Critical Political Economy of Web Advertising History
- Matthew Crain
Chapter 23: Exploring Web Archives in the Age of Abundance: A
Social History Case Study of GeoCities - Ian Milligan
Chapter 24: Blogs - Ignacio Siles
Chapter 25: The History of Online Social Media - Christina Ortner,
Philip Sinner & Tanja Jadin
Part 05: Web History and Users, some Case Studies
Chapter 26: Cultural Historiography of the ′Homepage′ - Madhavi
Mallapragada
Chapter 27: Consumers, News and a History of Change - Allie
Kosterich & Matthew Weber
Chapter 28: Historical studies of national web domains - Niels
Brügger & Ditte Laursen
Chapter 29: The Origins of Electronic Literature as Net/Web Art -
James O′Sullivan & Dene Grigar
Chapter 30: Exploring the memory of the First World War using web
archives: web graphs seen from different angles - Valérie
Beaudouin, Zeynep Pehlivan & Peter Stirling
Chapter 31: A History with Web Archives, Not a History of Web
Archives: A History of the British Measles-Mumps-Rubella Vaccine
Crisis, 1998-2004 - Gareth Millward
Chapter 32: Religion and Web history - Peter Webster
Chapter 33: Hearing the Past: The Sonic Web from MIDI to Music
Streaming - Jeremy Wade Morris
Chapter 34: Memes - Jim McGrath
Chapter 35: Years of the Internet: Vernacular creativity before, on
and after the Chinese Web - Gabriele de Seta
Chapter 36: Cultural, political and technical factors influencing
early Web uptake in North America and East Asia - Mark
McLelland
Chapter 37: Online pornography - Susanna Paasonen
Chapter 38: Spam - Finn Brunton
Chapter 39: Trolls and Trolling History: From Subculture to
Mainstream Practices - Michael Nycyk
Part 06: The Roads Ahead
Chapter 40: Web archives and (digital) history: a troubled past and
a promising future? - Jane Winters
Niels Brügger is Professor at Aarhus University, the School of
Communication and Culture. In 2000 he co-founded the Centre for
Internet Studies, Aarhus University, and he has headed the centre
since 2010. Since 2014 Head of NetLab, a research infrastructure
for the study of the archived web. His research interests are web
historiography, web archiving, and media theory. Within these
fields he has authored a number of publications, among
others Web 25: Histories from the first 25 years of the World
Wide Web (Ed., Peter Lang, 2017), The Web as History:
Using Web Archives to Understand the Past and the Present (Ed.
with Ralph Schroeder, UCL Press, 2017), and The Archived Web:
Doing History in the Digital Age (MIT Press, 2018). He is
co-founder (2017) and Managing editor of the international
journal Internet histories: Digital technology, culture and
society (Taylor & Francis/Routledge).
Ian Milligan is an Associate Professor of History at the
University of Waterloo, where he teaches Canadian and digital
history. Ian′s work explores how historians can use web archives,
the large repositories of cultural information that the Internet
Archive and many other libraries have been collecting since 1996.
He has published two books: the co-authored Exploring Big
Historical Data: The Historian’s Macroscope (2015)
and Rebel Youth: 1960s Labour Unrest, Young Workers, and New
Leftists in English Canada (2014). In 2016, Ian was named the
Canadian Society for Digital Humanities/Société canadienne des
humanités numériques (CSDH/SCHN)’s recipient of the Outstanding
Early Career Award.
Historians of the twenty-first century need to understand both the
history of the Web, and the kinds of histories that can be written
with online sources. There is no better guide to this crucial
dimension of contemporary life than the SAGE Handbook of Web
History. With chapters on web archiving, ethical considerations,
technology, platforms, visualization, computation, quantitative and
network analyses and many other subjects, it promises to become a
key resource, not only for so-called digital historians, but for
any historian who uses a computer in his or her work.
*William J. Turkel*
With so much of human expression from the last three decades
documented on what we broadly call the Web, a better understanding
of the nature of this complicated electronic medium is long past
due. It is essential that we fully grasp the technology of the Web,
how Web archives are assembled and can be traversed, and how the
Web itself has a fascinating, complex history. This volume will be
greatly welcomed by historians, social scientists, and any other
researcher delving into the rich and multifaceted realm of the Web,
which is indeed as worldly and wide as its longer name
suggests.
*Dan Cohen*
This handbook provides a broad range of interdisciplinary
perspectives on the Web at the very moment in its history when
serious questions are being raised over whether the Web can become
the world wide trusted source of information once envisioned by Tim
Berners-Lee and his colleagues. This collection is a must addition
for any library or researcher focused on the social life and impact
of the Internet, Web and related information and communication
technologies.
*William H. Dutton*
In 2003, Roy Rosenzweig, pointing out that historians largely
ignored born-digital sources, called for them to get involved in
preserving digital culture and exploring how to analyze its
abundance. In 2018, the vast majority of historians have still yet
to meaningfully engage with web archives.
This Handbook provides the jumpstart for which the field
of web history has been waiting. The volume amplifies and
elaborates the importance of the Web as a source and as an object
of study. More importantly, the contributors provide a multifaceted
overview of web history that guides readers through the nature of
web archives, how to approach analyzing them, what methods are
available, how to understand the technical underpinnings of web
history, and how to explore web platforms. With
this Handbook to get them started, historians will be
ready for the research in web history that must form a part of any
effort to understand the world of the 1990s and beyond.
*Prof. Stephen Robertson*
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