postpujc
Postpujc is a term used in digital media studies to describe a post-public, collaborative content paradigm in which multiple users contribute to and refine a single content artifact across distributed platforms. It expands the earlier concept of Public-User Joint Creation (PUJC) by emphasizing ongoing post-public editing, cross-platform provenance, and community governance of the work rather than a single author’s control.
Etymology and development: The term combines “post” with PUJC, an acronym for Public-User Joint Creation, a proposed
Core features: Postpujc projects typically support distributed authorship, iterable revisions, transparent version histories, and provenance tracking.
Applications and examples: In education, postpujc supports collaborative annotation and co-creation of open textbooks. In culture
Reception and challenges: Critics argue that the model can complicate attribution, funding, and governance. Technical hurdles
Related concepts include participatory culture, collaborative authorship, co-creation, and the broader field of post-digital media.