New in 2023: The Book Authorship and Publishing in the Humanities, published with Cambridge University Press:

Authorship and Publishing in the Humanities_Knöchelmann

Work in Progress…

Knöchelmann, Marcel (working paper): Make Art. Fight the Power. Literary Authorship and Civil Society. (Available on request: The ‘Racial Allegory Guy’ Colson Whitehead.).

Knöchelmann, Marcel (working paper): Resonances of Poetic Authorship: The Phenomenology of Poetry and the Work of Tomas Tranströmer. Manuscript available on request.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (in review): Peer Review and Rational Discourse: Empirical Realities of Outsourced Judgement. Manuscript available on request.

 

Writing in the Sciences: Scientists as Writers, Scientific Writing, and the Persuasive Story.

Knöchelmann M & Schendzielorz C: Writing in the Sciences: Scientists as Writers, Scientific Writing, and the Persuasive Story. Preprint: https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/fmcsp/ 

Writing in the sciences transcends the notion of sticking to the data; writing is a complex transformation of a wealth of semi-structured information into a clear and persuasive scientific story. The formalised form of a research article contains this story and, if published, legitimises it; this yields authorship. This article provides a nuanced, empirically-driven appreciation of scientific writing. It elucidates the hermeneutics of the scientific story and showcases different modes of writing as iteration and collaboration, spanning across levels of seniority and position, or re-emphasising them. Furthermore, it delivers a new perspective on professional scientific writers, who provide writing-as-a-service.

 

 

 

Science In Formation: The Indexed Scientist and the Inaccessibility of Scientific Information.

 

Knöchelmann M: Science In Formation: The Indexed Scientist and the Inaccessibility of Scientific Information. Invited contribution to an edited volume, to be published  with De Gruyter in 2024. Preprint: https://osf.io/preprints/socarxiv/xwpq6

What is inhibiting access to scientific information? The treatment of scientists is comparable to the treatment of scientific information; they are both bureaucratically processed by means of quantifiable metrics and indices. The symbolic form that represents substance is as important as substance itself. Scientists have to index themselves within the body of knowledge, instead of vice versa; knowledge itself is without authorship. This employment of metrics and indices has made authorship an objective on its own; it requires publishing for the published name, instead of publishing as a communicative means. This, in return, is foundational for the inaccessibility of scientific information. In this chapter, we will reconstruct this shift of means and ends. To do so, we need to start with the information and see how it is being treated to conform to the form of the publication and how it becomes enclosed with meta data (section A). In the following two sections, we will turn towards economic criteria, specifically the low price elasticity of demand that seems to explain science’s serials crisis (B), and how open access to scientific publications failed as a solution for liberating scientific information (C). We will arrive at a utopian technological determinism towards making scientific information more accessible which is inhibited by our social practices.

 

 

 

Selected Scholarly Articles

Formal Authorship in the Wake of Uncertain Futures: The Narrative of Publish or Perish in the Humanities. Published 2024 in Research Evaluation.

Formal Authorship in the Wake of Uncertain Futures: The Narrative of Publish or Perish in the Humanities. Published 2024 in Research Evaluation.

Publish or Perish has a variety of meanings. Most often, the term is understood as a reference to the material requirements of publishing relentlessly in order to make or advance a career in contemporary academia. In this article, I show that Publish or Perish is also a cultural narrative that provides a formal rationalistic solution to the uncertainty of early career scholars. Funds are scarce, competition is fierce, the individual future within academia is unknown—the Publish or Perish narrative claims that if you just keep publishing, you can overcome these obstacles. This narrative is perpetuated among aspiring scholars and creates peer pressure where it exerts its power to a certain extent regardless of material requirements, especially in the humanities. Based on extensive discussion of literature and data from a qualitative study with humanities scholars in Germany and the UK, employing a cultural sociological approach, I trace the meaning of Publish or Perish as this narrative. I look at how it is passed on among early career scholars, and how senior scholars respond to it in situations of mentorship and supervision. This perspective emphasizes the importance of everyday situations that trigger anxiety, as well as the importance of mentorship as a crucial means of reducing such anxiety. This is pertinent to reforms of evaluation practices that tend to abstract from such mundane situations. The notion of the slippery slope (Hartmut Rosa) helps comprehend this anxiety.

Find the original article in Research Evaluation at Oxford University Press here: Formal Authorship in the Wake of Uncertain Futures: The Narrative of Publish or Perish in the Humanities.

Find the open access manuscript version here: Formal Authorship in the Wake of Uncertain Futures: The Narrative of Publish or Perish in the Humanities. (Open Access Author Manuscript Version)

 

 

 

Cultural Intermediation and Civil Society: Towards a Hermeneutically Strong Conception. Published 2024 in Cultural Sociology.
Cultural Intermediation and Civil Society: Towards a Hermeneutically Strong Conception. Published 2024 in Cultural Sociology.
Literary fiction narrates ethical and moral meaning. It is rich with ethical conceptions of the good life and expressions of moral universalism, and it assumes a meaningful role in civil society through this richness. And yet, existing conceptions of cultural intermediation do not consider this richness; they are reductive in the way they focus on the social-structural space in between author and reader. Cultural intermediation is trimmed down to competition and generalizations of taste and aesthetic acclaim without considering cultural meaningfulness. In this article, I propose and discuss a new conception of cultural intermediation that builds a bridge between understanding the production and reception of literature in social-structural terms and society’s civil discourse. I draw on a diverse set of authors from philosophy and cultural sociology – discourse ethics and civil sphere theory in particular – to form a critique of intermediation. I conceptualize what it means to claim that literary text is a morally meaningful medium in three different ways: productive intermediation, receptive intermediation and critical intermediation. And I highlight that literary fiction is not culture per se, but that it enables actors to mediate culture. From authors along with agents, publishers, distributors and critics towards readers, literary text is embedded in culture-specific context. This is a hermeneutically strong conception of cultural intermediation that contributes to a meaning-centred sociology of literature.

Find the open access manuscript version here: Cultural Intermediation and Civil Society: Towards a Hermeneutically Strong Conception (Open Access Manuscript Version)

 

 

 

Research Cultures in Germany. A Study commissioned by the Volkswagen Foundation.

Ploder M, David Walker, Helene Schiffbänker, Jürgen Streicher, Ruth Müller, Aysel Sultan, Clemens Bluemel, Marcel Knöchelmann, Dagmar Simon: Wissenschaftskulturen in Deutschland. Eine Studie im Auftrag der VolkswagenStiftung. Endbericht 2023.

Access the English edition of the report: Research Cultures in Germany. A Study commissioned by the Volkswagen Foundation.

From the introduction: ‘The purpose of the Volkswagen Foundation is “to promote science and technology in research and teaching”. It was in this context that the idea for the study presented here was born: a qualitative survey on the topic of “scientific cultures in Germany”. The aim was to generate specific recommendations for beneficial alterations, using an up-to-date analysis on current circumstances and issues. This is an endeavour that we believe has not yet taken place in Germany in this quality and scope.’

Die deutsche Ausgabe des Endberichts ist hier online verfügbar: Wissenschaftskulturen in Deutschland. Eine Studie im Auftrag der Volkswagen Stiftung.

From the introduction: ‘”Wissenschaftskulturen in Deutschland” lautet der Titel einer großangelegten Studie, die die VolkswagenStiftung Ende 2021 in Auftrag gegeben hat. Die Vorgabe war es, Wandel und Transformationen des deutschen Wissenschaftssystems in Tiefe und Breite zu analysieren – etwa in puncto Karriereverläufe. Und anschließend aus den Befunden konkrete Empfehlungen für das Förderhandeln der Stiftung abzuleiten.’

 

 

 

Herausgeberschaft und Verantwortung: Über die Un-/Abhängigkeit wissenschaftlicher Fachzeitschriften. In Bibliothek in Forschung und Praxis.

Knöchelmann M: Herausgeberschaft und Verantwortung: Über die Un-/Abhängigkeit wissenschaftlicher Fachzeitschriften. In Bibliothek in Forschung und Praxis.  Online at: https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/bfp-2022-0090/html

Technical advances enable open access as well as independence from established publishers. This results questions of responsible editorship. What does independence mean in terms of the design of quality assurance processes, handling of bibliometrics, foremost the Journal Impact Factor, or visibility? This article showcases and critically reflects the findings of an empirical study on the responsibility of editorship in medicine and philosophy. They point towards the critical role of libraries with their publishing consultation services.

Find an open access version of Herausgeberschaft und Verantwortung: Über die Un-/Abhängigkeit wissenschaftlicher Fachzeitschriften here.

 

 

 

 

The Rise of the Guest Editor—Discontinuities of Editorship in Scholarly Publishing. Co-authored. In Frontiers in Research Metrics and Analytics.

Knöchelmann M, Hesselmann F, Reinhart M and Schendzielorz C (2022): The Rise of the Guest Editor—Discontinuities of Editorship in Scholarly Publishing. In Frontiers in Research Metrics and Analytics 6. Online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frma.2021.748171/full.

Scholarly publishing lives on traditioned terminology that gives meaning to subjects such as authors, inhouse editors and external guest editors, artifacts such as articles, journals, special issues, and collected editions, or practices of acquisition, selection, and review. These subjects, artifacts, and practices ground the constitution of scholarly discourse. And yet, the meaning ascribed to each of these terms shifts, blurs, or is disguised as publishing culture shifts, which becomes manifest in new digital publishing technology, new forms of publishing management, and new forms of scholarly knowledge production. As a result, we may come to over- or underestimate changes in scholarly communication based on traditioned but shifting terminology. In this article, we discuss instances of scholarly publishing whose meaning shifted. We showcase the cultural shift that becomes manifest in the new, prolific guest editor. Though the term suggests an established subject, this editorial role crystallizes a new cultural setting of loosened discourse communities and temporal structures, a blurring of publishing genres and, ultimately, the foundations of academic knowledge production.

 

 

Systemimmanenz und Transformation: Die Bibliothek der Zukunft als lokale Verwalterin? In Bibliothek Forschung und Praxis.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2021): Systemimmanenz und Transformation: Die Bibliothek der Zukunft als lokale Verwalterin? In Bibliothek Forschung und Praxis 45 (1). Online at: https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/bfp-2020-0101/html.

Germany as a unified site for science and scholarship aims to enlarge its share of open access publications by means of transformative agreements with large publishers. This, however, is but a transformation in the sense of a soft evolution within the existing system. It prohibits the notion of equity that was once foundational for open access. The future of the library seems to be reduced to the role of the local administrator instead of it being an integrative institution with the ability to change the system.

Find an open access version of Systemimmanenz und Transformation: Die Bibliothek der Zukunft als lokale Verwalterin? here.

 

 

The Democratisation Myth: Open Access and the Solidification of Epistemic Injustices. In Science and Technology Studies.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2021): The Democratisation Myth: Open Access and the Solidification of Epistemic Injustices. In Science and Technology Studies 34 (2). Online at: https://sciencetechnologystudies.journal.fi/article/view/94964.

Open access (OA) in the Global North is considered to solve an accessibility problem in scholarly communication. But this accessibility is restricted to the consumption of knowledge. Epistemic injustices inhering in the scholarly communication of a global production of knowledge remain unchanged. This underscores that the commercial or big deal OA dominating Europe and North America have little revolutionary potential to democratise knowledge. Academia in the Global North, driven by politics of progressive neoliberalism, can even reinforce its hegemonic power by solidifying and legitimating contemporary hierarchies of scholarly communication through OA. In a critique of the notion of a democratisation of knowledge, I showcase manifestations of OA as either allowing consumption of existing discourse or as active participation of discourse in the making. The latter comes closer to being the basis for a democratisation of knowledge. I discuss this as I issue a threefold conceptualisation of epistemic injustices comprising of testimonial injustice, hermeneutical injustice, and epistemic objectification. As these injustices prevail, the notion of a democratisation of knowledge through OA is but another form of technological determinism that neglects the intricacies of culture and hegemony.

Find an open access version of The Democratisation Myth: Open Access and the Solidification of Epistemic Injustices on this homepage.

 

 

Open Science in the Humanities, or: Open Humanities? In Publications.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2019): Open Science in the Humanities, or: Open Humanities? In Publications 7 (4), DOI: 10.3390/publications7040065.

Open science refers to both the practices and norms of more open and transparent communication and research in scientific disciplines and the discourse on these practices and norms. There is no such discourse dedicated to the humanities. Though the humanities appear to be less coherent as a cluster of scholarship than the sciences are, they do share unique characteristics which lead to distinct scholarly communication and research practices. A discourse on making these practices more open and transparent needs to take account of these characteristics. The prevalent scientific perspective in the discourse on more open practices does not do so, which confirms that the discourse’s name, open science, indeed excludes the humanities so that talking about open science in the humanities is incoherent. In this paper, I argue that there needs to be a dedicated discourse for more open research and communication practices in the humanities, one that integrates several elements currently fragmented into smaller, unconnected discourses (such as on open access, preprints, or peer review). I discuss three essential elements of open science—preprints, open peer review practices, and liberal open licences—in the realm of the humanities to demonstrate why a dedicated open humanities discourse is required.

Find an open access version of Open Humanities on this homepage.

 

 

Selected Other Articles

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2021): Unknown Shibboleth: On the Opacity of Gatekeeping. In Verfassungsblog. Online at: https://verfassungsblog.de/unknown-shibboleth-on-the-opacity-of-gatekeeping/.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2021): Die Stunde der Vermittler. In Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (114). Online at: https://www.faz.net/aktuell/karriere-hochschule/hoersaal/wissenschaftskommunikation-mangel-an-kritischer-kompetenz-17346788.html.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2020): Open Humanities: Why Open Science in the Humanities is not Enough. In LSE Impact Blog. Online at https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2020/02/25/open-humanities-why-open-science-in-the-humanities-is-not-enough/.

Grund, Martin; Knöchelmann, Marcel; Mann, Martin; Specht, Jule (2019): 100 Prozent Bezahlung für 100 Prozent Leistung. In Jan-Martin Wiarda Blog. Online at  https://www.jmwiarda.de/2019/10/21/100-prozent-bezahlung-f%C3%BCr-100-prozent-leistung/.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2019): Traditionelles Denken behindert Open Access. In Forschung & Lehre. Online at https://www.forschung-und-lehre.de/zeitfragen/traditionelles-denken-behindert-open-access-1985/.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2019): The Open Research Library: Centralisation without Openness. In LSE Impact Blog. Online at https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2019/05/31/the-open-research-library-centralisation-without-openness/.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2019): Plan S, falsch gedacht – eine Replik. Im ZEIT CHANCEN Brief 04.04.2019.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2019): Wissenschaft verantwortet Gesellschaft verantwortet Wissenschaft. In Wissenschaftsforum der Sozialdemokratie. Online at https://forscher.de/wissenschaft-verantwortet-gesellschaft-verantwortet-wissenschaft/.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2019): Pay to Publish Open Access: On the DEAL-Wiley Agreement. In Elephant in the Lab. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.2545583.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2018): Library Publishing, or How to Make Use of Your Opportunities. Online at https://marcel-knoechelmann.de/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Library-publishing-institutional-selfpublishing_2018_Kn%C3%B6chelmann.pdf.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2018): Don’t Take Openness as a Good on its Own—Equality Is. In OpenUP Hub. Online at https://www.openuphub.eu/community/blog/item/don-t-take-openness-as-a-good-on-its-own-equality-is.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2018): Open access book publishing should be community-focused and aim to let diversity thrive, not be driven by a free market paradigm. In LSE Impact Blog. Online at https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2018/10/23/open-access-book-publishing-should-be-community-focused-and-aim-to-let-diversity-thrive-not-be-driven-by-a-free-market-paradigm/.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2015): Digitally Supported Reading: The Standardisation of Markup Languages and its Impact on Reading.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2014): XML im Publikationsprozess: Veränderte Publikationsprozesse durch medienneutrale Inhaltslagerung mit XML im Bereich Sach- und Fachliteratur.

Knöchelmann, Marcel (2014): Disruptive Innovation als Erfolgsfaktor am Beispiel Amazon.

 

Also:

Find my Google Scholar profile here.

Marcel Knöchelmann