The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
History of the future

This transition from the ‘book’, to something new, fundamentally undercuts what we do more generally as ‘historians’. When you start to unpick the nature of the historical discipline, it is tied up with the technologies of the printed page and the book in ways that are powerful and determining. Our footnotes, our post-Rankean cross referencing and practises of textual analysis are embedded within the technology of the book, and its library.The Dictionary has these features as well as the links, browse and search functions that are new to digital history. As we have learnt how to edit, build and work with this linked information, it has become clear that our individual contributors' work now sits within an assemblage of other material that might either support or contradict any given statement made by an individual historian. The author has well and truly ceded control of the context of their work. We don't yet know how readers are reacting to these possibilities, and still, the most common question Dictionary staff are asked is 'When will you be publishing a printed version?', to which the answer is 'We won't'. At close to a million words, it's already far too big. Are we creating a transitional format for history here, one of many that will emerge in coming years? I hope so. It's going to be fun finding out.
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