Artículos de revistas
What is an author now? Discourse analysis applied to the idea of an author
Fecha
2015-01-01Registro en:
Journal Of Documentation. Bingley: Emerald Group Publishing Ltd, v. 71, n. 5, p. 1094-1114, 2015.
0022-0418
10.1108/JD-05-2014-0068
WOS:000369171000012
WOS000369171000012.pdf
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Univ Wisconsin
Institución
Resumen
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to discuss and shed light on the following questions: What is an author? Is it a person who writes? Or, is it, in information, an iconic taxonomic designation (some might say a classification) for a group of writings that are recognized by the public in some particular way? What does it mean when a search engine, or catalog, asks a user to enter the name of an author? And how does that accord with the manner in which the data have been entered in association with the names of the entities identified with the concept of authorship? Design/methodology/approach - The authors use several cases as bases of phenomenological discourse analysis, combining as best the authors can components of eidetic bracketing (a Husserlian technique for isolating noetic reduction) with Foucauldian discourse analysis. The two approaches are not sympathetic or together cogent, so the authors present them instead as alternative explanations alongside empirical evidence. In this way the authors are able to isolate components of iconic authorship and then subsequently engage them in discourse. Findings - An author is an iconic name associated with a class of works. An author is a role in public discourse between a set of works and the culture that consumes them. An author is a role in cultural sublimation, or a power broker in deabstemiation. An author is last, if ever, a person responsible for the intellectual content of a published work. The library catalog's attribution of author is at odds with the Foucauldian discursive comprehension of the role of an author. Originality/value - One of the main assets of this paper is the combination of Foucauldian discourse analysis with phenomenological analysis for the study of the author. The authors turned to Foucauldian discourse analysis to discover the loci of power in the interactions of the public with the named authorial entities. The authors also looked to phenomenological analysis to consider the lived experience of users who encounter the same named authorial entities. The study of the author in this combined way facilitated the revelation of new aspects of the role of authorship in search engines and library catalogs.