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imported>Larry Sanger
("online" is obvious: this is a website! No need to explain why we aim at credibility and quality.)
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=== Welcome! ===
=== Welcome! ===
We are an online encyclopedia project, and more.
We are an encyclopedia project, and more.


We are a different sort of Web 2.0 project:
We are a different sort of Web 2.0 project:
* We aim at credibility and quality, not just quantity. Why? Because we want to be the best wiki encyclopedia on the Internet.
* We aim at credibility and quality, not just quantity.
* We're aiming to be better and more reliable than Wikipedia.
* We're aiming to be better and more reliable than Wikipedia.
* We offer gentle expert oversight.
* We offer gentle expert oversight.

Revision as of 08:03, 7 August 2007

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Natural Sciences Social Sciences
Humanities Arts
Applied Arts and
Sciences
Recreation

Welcome!

We are an encyclopedia project, and more.

We are a different sort of Web 2.0 project:

  • We aim at credibility and quality, not just quantity.
  • We're aiming to be better and more reliable than Wikipedia.
  • We offer gentle expert oversight.
  • We use our real names, not pseudonyms.
  • We're collegial.


We have added over 2,500 articles since Nov. 2006.

Join us!

  • Regular smart folks and experts—welcome!
  • Response within 24 hours, guaranteed.

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Literature

Unlike scholars in certain fields of learning, such as biology, where the boundaries are fairly well defined, those in the field of literature still debate exactly what the term means. When the celebrated 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica defined literature as “the best expression of the best thought reduced to writing,” few dared question it. Now, though, a century of such questioning has broadened the definition so that it can include nearly any text in any human language, even works in other media. Practically speaking, literature’s present-day definition is shaped by the perspective from which one regards it: scholars of a theoretical bent see it as embedded in questions of race, class, and gender, and highly variable over historical time, while those more aesthetically inclined tend to emphasize its continuity within traditions of arts and humane letters. One perspective typically mistrusts the other.