[T]he theoretical underpinnings, issues raised, and points made throughout the volume are useful beyond their immediate applications. They pose questions of access, data collection, ethics, and economics that will interest scholars of the history of collections, museum studies, digital humanities, library and information sciences, and related fields of literary theory and criticism and media studies.
- J. Decker, CHOICE
What does it mean to collect in the digital age?" . . . This question encapsulates the sentiment at the heart of this excellent edited collection. . . . Across the entirety of the volume, it becomes clear that collecting in the digital age has become about collecting data, and in particular, collecting data about people, which has explicitly political and economic implications.
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