Difference between revisions of "Aaarg"

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== <small>'''Description'''</small> ==
 
== <small>'''Description'''</small> ==
  
AAARG, originalmente un acrónimo de Artists, Architects, and Activists Reading Group, es una biblioteca digital de acceso abierto y gratuito especializada en textos académicos del campo de las humanidades. Fue creada en Estados Unidos por Sean Dockray, a principios de siglo, como una forma de organización para-académica de almacenamiento y distribución libre de textos de uso frecuente en universidades y otros centros de enseñanza superior. Su biblioteca se nutre de las aportaciones de los usuarios del sitio, y consiste fundamentalmente en libros (compilaciones, monográficos, etc.), y artículos publicados originalmente en revistas científicas, mayoritariamente en inglés, alemán, francés, español e italiano. El catálogo de AAARG está orientado a estudiantes, académicos, e investigadores universitarios de humanidades, que no poseen recursos o formas de acceso a estos contenidos y requieren de herramientas de investigación de acceso libre y gratuito. Los contenidos están organizados por colecciones, listas de lectura (ambas, creadas por los propios miembros de la comunidad), o alfabéticamente, por autores. AAARG es un proyecto sin fines lucrativos. No se financia a través de publicidad alojada en sus páginas ni obtiene beneficio alguno por membresía, pero se nutre de donaciones privadas que ayudan a costear los gastos derivados de las acciones legales que afronta (ver [https://www.gofundme.com/aaaaarg Aaaaarghhhhh, a lawsuit!]). A lo largo de estos años, AAARG ha sufrido varias demandas por parte de editoriales y autores por distribución ilegal de material protegido, que le han llevado a cambiar de dominio varias veces y modificar el nombre del proyecto. Actualmente, su dominio [http://aaaaarg.fail aaaaarg.fail] está registrado por Marcell Mars.
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AAARG, originally an acronym standing for Artists, Architects and Activists Reading Group,
 +
is a free, open access digital library specializing in academic texts with a humanities
 +
approach. It was created in the United States by Sean Dockray at the turn of the century as
 +
a para-academic way of organizing, storing and freely distributing texts frequently used in
 +
universities and other higher education institutions. Its library is built out of users
 +
contributions and is fundamentally composed of books (compilations, monographs, etc.) and
 +
articles originally published in science magazines, mostly in English, German, French,
 +
Spanish and Italian. The AAARG catalogue is aimed at students, academics and humanities
 +
researchers who don’t have the resources or access to this content and need free,
 +
accessible research tools. The content is arranged in collections, reading lists (both created
 +
by community members), or alphabetically, by author. AAARG is a non-profit project. It is not
 +
financed through advertisements on its site, nor does it profit from its membership, but is
 +
sustained through private donations that help cover costs incurred by legal action it’s had to
 +
deal with (see Aaaaarghhhhh, a lawsuit!). Throughout the years, AAARG has dealt with
 +
lawsuits from publishers and authors for the illegal distribution of protected content,
 +
prompting a change in name and domain several times. Their current domain, aaaaarg.fail,
 +
was registered by Marcell Mars.
  
 
== <small>'''Links'''</small> ==
 
== <small>'''Links'''</small> ==

Revision as of 20:55, 15 May 2017

Screencapture-aaaaarg-fail-1483478244917.png

Self-portrait

The humanities are being decimated, largely through capitalist restructuring of universities and knowledge, but also through the humanities’ incapability or unwillingness to articulate a role for itself within the financialized university. AAARG plays a role inasmuch as this restructuring creates uneven distribution of access to knowledge and resources—as libraries are shut in austerity governments or books are destroyed in dictatorships, but hopefully it also plays a role in providing writers, artists, designers, philosophers, and organizers with some theoretical tools for producing the humanities that we need to confront what is to come (conceptually, ecologically, politically, etc.). (Sean Dockray, creador de AAARG, en entrevista con Jonathan Basile, en https://www.guernicamag.com/jonathan-basile-whos-afraid-of-aaarg/).

Description

AAARG, originally an acronym standing for Artists, Architects and Activists Reading Group, is a free, open access digital library specializing in academic texts with a humanities approach. It was created in the United States by Sean Dockray at the turn of the century as a para-academic way of organizing, storing and freely distributing texts frequently used in universities and other higher education institutions. Its library is built out of users contributions and is fundamentally composed of books (compilations, monographs, etc.) and articles originally published in science magazines, mostly in English, German, French, Spanish and Italian. The AAARG catalogue is aimed at students, academics and humanities researchers who don’t have the resources or access to this content and need free, accessible research tools. The content is arranged in collections, reading lists (both created by community members), or alphabetically, by author. AAARG is a non-profit project. It is not financed through advertisements on its site, nor does it profit from its membership, but is sustained through private donations that help cover costs incurred by legal action it’s had to deal with (see Aaaaarghhhhh, a lawsuit!). Throughout the years, AAARG has dealt with lawsuits from publishers and authors for the illegal distribution of protected content, prompting a change in name and domain several times. Their current domain, aaaaarg.fail, was registered by Marcell Mars.

Links

URL: http://aaaaarg.fail/

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