Talk:Christianity/Bibliography: Difference between revisions

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imported>Tom Morris
(New page: == Any thoughts on how we are to build this? == It would seem that producing a bibliography for Christianity may be quite complex. I'm thinking it may be a good idea to point to spec...)
 
imported>Richard Jensen
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== Any thoughts on how we are to build this? ==
== Any thoughts on how we are to build this? ==


It would seem that producing a bibliography for [[Christianity]] may be quite complex. I'm thinking it may be a good idea to point to specific article pages and attached bibliographies. For instance, books on the Reformation should probably be on a bibliography page about the Reformation, or on Protestantism generally. It may indeed be useful for someone in religious studies to edit the bibliography. --[[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 08:58, 12 April 2008 (CDT)
It would seem that producing a bibliography for [[Christianity]] may be quite complex. I'm thinking it may be a good idea to point to specific article pages and attached bibliographies. For instance, books on the Reformation should probably be on a bibliography page about the Reformation, or on Protestantism generally. It may indeed be useful for someone in religious studies to edit the bibliography. --[[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 08:58, 12 April 2008 (CDT)
::we have a working bibliography now of large, sweeping books.  Eventually we'll have a few thousand articles on subtopics; I hope each gets a bibliography. [[User:Richard Jensen|Richard Jensen]] 10:12, 12 April 2008 (CDT)
:We should just give a brief bibliographic overview, and we should put a number limit on the total number of entries under each subhead (ten entries, at most). Each category needs to have a "go-to work"-- something fairly basic for folks just getting started, and about which we can say "a good general survey." More interested readers will dig further. Readers interested in a particular topic can check out the bibliography for that specific article, of course.
:I have taken a stab at an outline for the bibliography, but I have not really started moving things around. For one, I only feel comfortable putting something in a bibliography if it is something I have personally used, and, for purposes of usability, I think it is important that the list be pretty manageable and navigable.
:I appreciate the work you put into building out our bibliographies, Richard, but I worry that they get too large and overwhelming too quickly. I think there is a need for restraint, particularly when we're dealing with non-academic readers. (Maybe we want to have advanced ''bibliography'' pages, too. That'd be a thought...) [[User:Brian P. Long|Brian P. Long]] 10:18, 12 April 2008 (CDT)
::the Christianity bibliography is very restrained right now and is aimed at the "general reader". A university student (CZ's target audience) taking a history course will need much more than this, but that is the purpose of the bibliographies on topics like the Reformation, Luther, Schleiermacher, Quakers, etc. etc. [[User:Richard Jensen|Richard Jensen]] 10:40, 12 April 2008 (CDT)

Latest revision as of 09:40, 12 April 2008

Any thoughts on how we are to build this?

It would seem that producing a bibliography for Christianity may be quite complex. I'm thinking it may be a good idea to point to specific article pages and attached bibliographies. For instance, books on the Reformation should probably be on a bibliography page about the Reformation, or on Protestantism generally. It may indeed be useful for someone in religious studies to edit the bibliography. --Tom Morris 08:58, 12 April 2008 (CDT)

we have a working bibliography now of large, sweeping books. Eventually we'll have a few thousand articles on subtopics; I hope each gets a bibliography. Richard Jensen 10:12, 12 April 2008 (CDT)
We should just give a brief bibliographic overview, and we should put a number limit on the total number of entries under each subhead (ten entries, at most). Each category needs to have a "go-to work"-- something fairly basic for folks just getting started, and about which we can say "a good general survey." More interested readers will dig further. Readers interested in a particular topic can check out the bibliography for that specific article, of course.
I have taken a stab at an outline for the bibliography, but I have not really started moving things around. For one, I only feel comfortable putting something in a bibliography if it is something I have personally used, and, for purposes of usability, I think it is important that the list be pretty manageable and navigable.
I appreciate the work you put into building out our bibliographies, Richard, but I worry that they get too large and overwhelming too quickly. I think there is a need for restraint, particularly when we're dealing with non-academic readers. (Maybe we want to have advanced bibliography pages, too. That'd be a thought...) Brian P. Long 10:18, 12 April 2008 (CDT)
the Christianity bibliography is very restrained right now and is aimed at the "general reader". A university student (CZ's target audience) taking a history course will need much more than this, but that is the purpose of the bibliographies on topics like the Reformation, Luther, Schleiermacher, Quakers, etc. etc. Richard Jensen 10:40, 12 April 2008 (CDT)