I trapped an idea this morning and it makes me wonder if something like it
might exist somewhere in the world of collaborative knowledge production:
A written history of the world that is driven by an online,
collaboratively-assembled catalogue of the historical objects and sources
that have formed the histories we have read. Its the idea that if every
historical claim can be traced back to artefact evidence, then maybe a new
historical project can begin to rewrite a history that catalogues all
historical objects housed in public/private collections first, then used to
fleshed out the narrative afterwards. I'm imagining this done on a wiki,
where people can simply try to obtain as many available digital photographic
evidence of vases, scrolls, hand-written accounts, whatever and then
organizes them into a master chronology within the wiki space. There can
even be geopositional links that lead readers to find where these objects
may be located as well as how to access them, who has studied them,
etc.These images could have trackbacks to certain written accounts that have
relied on the evidence to fuel their historical narratives. Text in the body
associates itself directly and immediately the sources which form the
outline of the proejct. Text is prinicipally used to describe how these
sources have been used by historians. In later versions of this project,
master historical narratives could be added as a way to lend "surfability"
to student audiences.
I credit the inspiration for tihs idea, by the way, to an excellent
grad-level methods course I took with Sandra Braman in 2006, who had me read
Hayden White's "Tropics of Discourse".