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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Commerce of Thinking: Of Books and Bookstores

Stephen Dunne
- 01 May 2011 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 3, pp 407-409
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This article is published in Organization.The article was published on 2011-05-01. It has received 3 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Business economics.

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What remains is the book: The idea of the book in and around electronic space

TL;DR: In this article, the authors start at the point in the histories of the book that is widely understood as representing a closing of a parenthesis, that began with the invention of the printing press, up to the end of print, spanning some 500 years, beginning half way through the 15th century in Western Europe.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Commerce of Anonymity

TL;DR: The authors argue for an aesthetics and ethics of social anonymity that does not rely on or demand identification and that thereby remains open to the risk, surprise, and pleasure of shared existence, and theorize intimacy as that which remains unnameable in the "commerce" of our everyday lives.
Journal ArticleDOI

Introduction—Reading Spaces

TL;DR: For instance, the authors found that reading is interminable and that it is not possible to make the leap from one text to another and still another, adding to the dictum that writing, as "a signiicancescattering process" (Johnson, “Writing” 40), is "interminable".
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What remains is the book: The idea of the book in and around electronic space

TL;DR: In this article, the authors start at the point in the histories of the book that is widely understood as representing a closing of a parenthesis, that began with the invention of the printing press, up to the end of print, spanning some 500 years, beginning half way through the 15th century in Western Europe.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Commerce of Anonymity

TL;DR: The authors argue for an aesthetics and ethics of social anonymity that does not rely on or demand identification and that thereby remains open to the risk, surprise, and pleasure of shared existence, and theorize intimacy as that which remains unnameable in the "commerce" of our everyday lives.
Journal ArticleDOI

Introduction—Reading Spaces

TL;DR: For instance, the authors found that reading is interminable and that it is not possible to make the leap from one text to another and still another, adding to the dictum that writing, as "a signiicancescattering process" (Johnson, “Writing” 40), is "interminable".
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