The Pyramidal Book: Robert Darnton
Robert Darnton, NY Review of
Books:
http://www.nybooks.com/nyrev/WWWarchdisplay.cgi
(URL)?19990318005F
I am not advocating the sheer
accumulation of data, or arguing for links to databanks—so-called
hyperlinks. These can amount to little more than an elaborate form of
footnoting. Instead of bloating the electronic book, I think it possible to
structure it in layers arranged like a pyramid. The top layer could be a concise
account of the subject, available perhaps in paperback. The next layer could
contain expanded versions of different aspects of the argument, not arranged
sequentially as in a narrative, but rather as self-contained units that feed
into the topmost story. The third layer could be composed of documentation,
possibly of different kinds, each set off by interpretative essays. A fourth
layer might be theoretical or historiographical, with selections from previous
scholarship and discussions of them. A fifth layer could be pedagogic,
consisting of suggestions for classroom discussion and a model syllabus. And a
sixth layer could contain readers' reports, exchanges between the author and the
editor, and letters from readers, who could provide a growing corpus of
commentary as the book made its way through different groups of readers.