But now we are a news story, and it brings home the fact that there needs to be justice for historians too. The academy, the media, and the broader public history realm need to develop a common consensus and code for citing scholarship across platforms. 10/17
I don't know what the answer is. Obviously in the Backstory, where the work was entirely reliant on the work of one junior scholar, the omission was egregious. But the general issue isn't easily waved away.
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Academics who typically have the luxury of hundreds of digressive footnotes frequently think there is a "quick fix" to this (just cite the scholars!) but that's essentially a denial that different media have different conventions.
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I recently wrote a semi-popular piece for a publication that allows footnotes (but only 18), and not digressive ones. Even that was painful, because I had to skip over a lot of my "for more on this, see the work of X, Y, and Z" citations that are used to avoid ruffled feathers.
End of conversation
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