"On the ruins of seriality": The scientific journal and the nature of the scientific life

Endeavour. 2023 Dec;47(4):100885. doi: 10.1016/j.endeavour.2023.100885. Epub 2023 Nov 18.

Abstract

Twenty-first-century discourse on science has been marked by narratives of crisis. Science is said to be experiencing crises of public trust, of peer review and publishing, of reproducibility and replicability, and of recognition and reward. The dominant response has been to "repair" the scientific literature and the system of scientific publishing through open science. This paper places the current predicament of scholarly communication in historical perspective by exploring the evolution of the scientific journal in the second half of the twentieth century. I focus on a new genre of scientific journal invented by Dutch commercial publishers shortly after World War II, and on its effects on the nature of the scientific life. I show that profit-oriented publishers and discipline-building scientists worked together to make postwar science more open, while also arguing that formats of scientific publication have their own agency.

Keywords: Elsevier; Open science; Scientific journal; Scientific publishing; Scientific vocation; Seriality.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Peer Review*
  • Publications
  • Publishing*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Scholarly Communication