<divclass="card"><DOCUMENT_FRAGMENT><divclass="mw-parser-output"><h1><spanclass="mw-headline"id="making_public">making public</span><spanclass="mw-editsection"><spanclass="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><ahref="/mw-mediadesign/index.php?title=User:Simon/Making_public&action=edit&section=1"title="Edit section: making public">edit</a><spanclass="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></h1>
<p>see also<ahref="Consulting.html"title="User:Simon/Consulting">consulting</a>, <ahref="Inter-depending.html"title="User:Simon/Inter-depending">inter-depending</a>, <ahref="Meeting_in_small_rooms_in_small_groups.html"title="User:Simon/Meeting in small rooms in small groups">meeting in small rooms, in small groups</a>
</p><p>Making something public, and making publics. Matthew Stadler, writer and co-founder of the federated publishing network Publication Studio, makes a distinction between publishing and publication. For Stadler, publication happens not only through sharing texts, but also “setting up the circumstance through which we can talk and debate them, together”.
</p><p>Publishing survives through publication, which is the necessary creation and maintenance of the space created for a public; to read, to share texts, to discuss and publish them. Publication continues after the event of publishing.
</p><p>Image: Still from <i>What is Publication?</i>, a talk by Matthew Stadler, writer and co-founder of the federated publishing network Publication Studio, available at <aclass="external free"href="https://vimeo.com/14888791"rel="nofollow">https://vimeo.com/14888791</a>