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Video and Knowledge Communication

How and why we should make scholarship worth watching
Published onAug 16, 2021
Video and Knowledge Communication

What if, one day, advances in human knowledge could be represented in images, recorded sound, and moving pictures — audiovisually, in a word — rather than, as they are now, predominantly in text? Could such a thing happen? The July 2021 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, for example, has run an article (in text) about treating HIV in sub-Saharan Africa.1 One day, when we develop a system of citations in video as robust as print citations have become, and a scientific community as used to watching videos as it is to reading articles, could we imagine seeing an illustrated, footnoted, recorded, easily searchable TED-type talk taking the place of this 3,800-word piece in print? This type of video could, more prominently than the text does, showcase multiple dimensions of the research. There could be moving images of the patients and the laboratories; voice interviews with the doctors and the scientists; animations of the chemistry. A fully responsible video about this NEJM study also could highlight, with voice, moving images, and text, in fuller ways than the text-only article does, the fact that one of the pharmaceutical enterprises (Janssen Johnson & Johnson) profiled in the study is actually also sponsoring the study (and the research, and the authors) — a financial relationship that should, for ethical reasons, be rendered much more transparent. The NEJM in fact has published a two-minute-and-22-second animated video summary of this article, copyright @ the Massachusetts Medical Society (but without any kind of funding disclosure) at the end of the full text to online. Indeed, the Journal is producing quite a lot of multimedia content now — categories include “Audio Clinical Practice,” “Audio Interviews, “Audio Weekly Summaries,” “Interactive Medical Cases,” these “Quick Takes,” “Research Summaries,” and “Videos in Clinical Medicine”2 — so this seemingly distant day may not be too far off.

Just because a thing doesn’t exist today doesn’t mean it won’t exist later. Today we routinely publish our research and findings about scientific, technical, and medical progress in scholarly articles and monographs. However, we didn’t do that before the development and widespread use of what they call alphabetic letterblock printing, all of which began some 500 years ago. With audio and video production and distribution technology now available on laptop computers and cell phones, and becoming as ubiquitous and as much a part of the vernacular as print, could we be sliding into a phase of human communication where this medium too, now, is catching up to the message?

The philosopher and historian Walter Ong has said, “If knowledge is power, knowledge of how to generate knowledge is power over power.”5 The wheel, the sail, the compass, the clock, the lens, all the things that have facilitated knowledge and exploration, came about well before the advent of printing. Advances in scholarship, science, and civilization are not necessarily wedded to print. Ong would tell us that we are in the third phase of human communications today: the first being the unrecorded word (oral culture), which lasted for most of human existence; the second being the “denatured” word (the alphabet and print), which is only a few thousand years old; and the third being the word electrified for our new “sensorium,” a process that dates back only a couple hundred years, really to the start of radio and electricity.6 All these things — writing, printing, the telegraph, the radio, film, television, video — seemed complicated at the time of their introduction. Indeed writing, when it first appeared, was a brand new technology, much as we regard cameras and microphones as brand new technologies today. And it was treated as such. Writing called for the use of new “tools and other equipment,” “styli or brushes or pens,” “carefully prepared surfaces such as paper, animal skins, strips of wood,” “as well as inks or paints, and much more.” In fact writing seemed so complicated and time-consuming that we used to outsource it, much like we might outsource video production now. “In the West through the Middle Ages and earlier,” Ong says,

almost all those devoted to writing regularly used the services of a scribe because the physical labor writing involved — scraping and polishing the animal skin or parchment, whitening it with chalk, resharpening goose-quill pens with what we still call a pen-knife, mixing ink, and all the rest — interfered with thought and composition.7

Today, fewer and fewer Americans are receiving their news and information from print.8 What remains unknown is through what mode or medium — the person-to-person spoken word, the written word, the printed word, or the electronic word, to use Ong’s categories; print or audio or video, to use mine — we are transmitting and receiving our primary knowledge today. Imagine the new news network / channel / platform that we could establish by adapting to video and sound the top articles in research journals (articles that are all still mired in text, in print editions to which our libraries all still dolefully subscribe). Science, for example, offers its readers primarily these choices: “Summary”; “Full text”; and “PDF.” Imagine if instead we could watch video stories on — to pick from their current topics —“European deadly floods leave scientists stunned”; “Project launched to look for extraterrestrial visitors to our solar system”; Gamma-ray emissions from the Crab Nebula; the connections between jurisprudence and popular psychology; and the animal DNA you can find just by swabbing the air.9 Or better still, to watch them freely — that is, freely licensed! — and to share them!

Though it may be slowly, the video libraries and offerings at many of these publications are growing.10 That’s a good thing. We’ve been living through years now of recorded video — of the endless lying of Donald Trump, of the insurrectionists he spun up to try to stay in power, of COVID denialism — on our screens. As the history of the 21st century gets told, being able to access video archives of the public record and use them to produce our stories of progress, in the humanities as well as the sciences, will become a, perhaps even the, signal challenge of 21st-century publishing.

The United Nations Secretary General has dubbed our current crisis one of “Trust Deficit Disorder,” and in a recent article (coulda been a video) we can read about the networking of trust, particularized trust, and the big buzzkiller — trust that exists only in “who you know.”11 The type of medium one consumes knowledge through may correspond with the type of trust that person/reader/listener/viewer develops in the message that’s conveyed. Perhaps I trust something more when I hear a friend say it to me in person than if I read it in a newspaper, hear it on the radio, listen to it in a podcast, or watch the video of it on television or online. Ong might say we’re going backwards.

For these reasons and for many others, the main thing is not only to publish more video, but to render the materials that we publish in video and in every medium more verifiable, perhaps though citation schemes such as we have developed with footnotes and endnotes and data repositories now over the past 400 years. Publishing more video may, in the end, make more material more accessible; may make it more trustworthy; may make access to more knowledge more democratic; and correspond to the trend that scholars have identified as that trend, again: the arc of information bending toward greater freedom.12

Whatever articles, videos, and podcasts we publish, the main thing is to link to sources (video is woefully behind in this); to cite them well and completely; to be able to verify what we and others produce — using every tool in our belt.13 Print is good, but it hasn’t accomplished what it could. Elsevier publishes something called The Journal of Pain. That’s a helluva title. When you get one of the articles in it — this one below, by a doctor — the links in the author bio will show you who bought the space (and, in fact, the author):

The author received no financial support related to the creation and/or production of this manuscript. The author was the inventor and developer of oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate, including Actiq and Oralet, but has no relationship with TEVA or any of the generic companies that currently market these products. The author also has no relationship to any of the companies that are developing or have developed and/or market or sell any of the other rapid-acting fentanyl products or the fentanyl patches currently being sold today except he is a director of the Board of a public company Insys Therapeutics. Insys developed and currently markets and sells Subsys, a rapid-onset sublingual fentanyl spray that is approved for breakthrough cancer pain in opioid-tolerant patients.14

But only a search through press articles NOT in the article or linked to it today will tell you the deeper details about the author’s involvement in fentanyl.15 Only a search of his stock and stock option trades will show you details of the income he derived from his work touting opioids.16 Only a search of court cases and judgments will show you a glimpse of the extensive societal damage his work actually wreaked.17 And only a separate search of his patents will show you how his research institution has benefited — in the millions of dollars — from the medical scourge of our time.18

We should have the ability to have these links all before us, at once, and to add them to the articles and the archives, whether the medium is print, audio, or video. That way, the video conversations that are cited and imagined in this essay — the ones that are already available, and the ones that will be produced, one day down the line — will all be worth watching.


Peter B. Kaufman works at MIT Open Learning. He is the author of The New Enlightenment and the Fight to Free Knowledge (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2021) and the forthcoming A Manual of Video Style (MIT Press), from which this essay is adapted.

📖 read more essays in the “Business of Knowing” summer series 📖
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