Go to page content

The Discourse of Scholarly Communication

Librarian examines modern scholarship and relationship with Enlightenment

Research | Books at Memorial

The Discourse of Scholarly Communication examines the place and purpose of modern scholarship and its dialectical relationship with the ethos of Enlightenment.

Dr. Patrick Gamsby, a scholarly communications librarian at Memorial and an instructor in the Department of Sociology, argues that while Enlightenment/enlightenment is often used in the mottos of numerous academic institutions, its historical, social and philosophical elements are largely obscured.

Using a theoretical lens, Dr. Gamsby revisits the ideals of the Enlightenment alongside the often-contradictory issues of disciplinary boundaries, access to research, academic labour in the production of scholarship (author, peer reviewer, editor and translator), the interrelationship of form and content (lectures, textbooks, books and essays) and the stewardship of scholarship in academic libraries and archives.

It is ultimately argued that for the betterment of the scholarly communication ecosystem and the betterment of society, anti-Enlightenment rules of scholarship such as “publish or perish” should be dispensed with in favor of the formulation of a New Enlightenment.

The Discourse of Scholarly Communication is published by Rowman and Littlefield.

Latest News

‘A legacy for all of us’

A Marine Institute PhD candidate and National Geographic explorer dives into Fiji's pristine waters

A Q&A with Russell Noseworthy

The 2025 Sobey Award recipient on receiving the $45K news, learning leadership and how proud he is to represent Memorial

Building from memory

Memorial engineers constructing Danger Tree replica for permanent installation in Beaumont-Hamel

Statement on neutrality

Board of Regents approves institutional statement on neutrality

‘Waves of change’

pleasuremonger brings sex worker justice, community memory and history into transformative conversation

Dances of the Cure-abbean

2026 Brosnan lecture: combating cancer disparities in people of African ancestry