O'Sullivan begins with an overview of group theory, and explores several groups he sees to be precursors to Wikipedia: the Library of Alexandria, the British Royal Society, the French Republic of Letters, the Oxford English Dictionary, and the Left Book Club, a mid-century British communist publishing collective. For each group, O'Sullivan discusses the group's aims; its community and make-up; its costs of doing business ; its relations with the public; and its legacy. The second part of the book applies the group theory approach to Wikipedia, devoting a chapter to each aspect. Chapter 10, on the structure of Wikipedia, explains the use of "talk pages" and. Chapter 13, "Wikipedia and the Nature of Knowledge," explores the question of expertise. In this chapter O'Sullivan claims a fundamental disagreement between Wikipedia's two founders, Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger. While Wales, an admirer of the economistFriedrich Hayek, believed in the wisdom of crowds and that Wikipedia would eventually converge to ideal pages, Sanger believed in the necessity of experts to ensure quality content. O'Sullivan puts Wikipedia in the context of philosophical debates about expertise and elitism. The third and final part of the book explains how to use Wikipedia. O'Sullivan includes chapters on browsing and editing, and his longest chapter provides a 10-point schema to assess the value of Wikipedia articles. He uses the article on the Great Fire of London as an example, and a significant portion of the chapter reproduces earlier versions of it.
Reviews
The book was reviewed in the academic journalsLibraries and the Academy and Library Review, as well as in Wikipedia's community-written newspaper .
Literature
Chandler M. Armstrong. Dan O’Sullivan, Wikipedia: A New Community of Practice?, Farnham: Ashgate, 2009; 191 pp.:, £45.00 // International Sociology, Volume: 26, issue: 5, page: 652-655, September 1, 2011; doi:10.1177/02685809110260050803.
Colin Higgins. Book review: Wikipedia: A New Community of Practice? Dan O’Sullivan. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 2009. 191pp, £40.00. // Journal of Librarianship and Information Science, Vol 42, Issue 4, pp. 279–280; doi:10.1177/0961000610386667.