diff --git a/literature/literature.bib b/literature/literature.bib
index fd9cfbfc46c1eb0efef119e2f44384c6396dd8e5..5bb8cf1544550218ca28722230d8c685a8b7d795 100644
--- a/literature/literature.bib
+++ b/literature/literature.bib
@@ -106,6 +106,13 @@
   year = {2016}
 }
 
+@book{Tkacz2014,
+  title = {Wikipedia and the Politics of Openness},
+  author = {Tkacz, Nathaniel},
+  year = {2014},
+  publisher = {University of Chicago Press}
+}
+
 @inproceedings{WestKanLee2010,
   title = {Stiki: an anti-vandalism tool for wikipedia using spatio-temporal analysis of revision metadata},
   author = {West, Andrew G and Kannan, Sampath and Lee, Insup},
diff --git a/literature/notes b/literature/notes
index a4b83b0a13bf55b0a52551b724f5ac5c89091d5e..4dd62b9b1431318c2a5419eccc5bf08ae8978e19 100644
--- a/literature/notes
+++ b/literature/notes
@@ -1947,3 +1947,8 @@ formal norms embedded in bots and human computation tools."
 anyone who understands the norms, socializes him or herself, dodges the impersonal wall of
 semi-automated rejection and still wants to voluntarily contribute his or her time and energy can
 edit”"
+
+===========================================================
+\cite{Tkacz2014}
+
+"As historical artifacts, encyclopedias have regularly offered great insight into the periods in which they were written. They tell us about what constitutes knowledge at a particular time as well as how the various bodies of knowledge were thought to relate to one another." (p.4)
diff --git a/thesis/introduction.tex b/thesis/introduction.tex
index 3dc6c19a00bfb9cf19ea07dc247f454c6e9bea5e..5b985a3359efd3de88bdfd8f55c88eb7b1cc9ba0 100644
--- a/thesis/introduction.tex
+++ b/thesis/introduction.tex
@@ -25,6 +25,12 @@ Its core developer, Andrew Garrett, known on Wikipedia as User:Werdna, has calle
 \begin{comment}
 Don't make it a separate subsection, but use it to introduce the topic with a story, the way Geiger does.
 If the genesis doesn't make sense here, move it to Edit filters
+
+Nice quote:
+The Wikipedia Revolution: How A Bunch of Nobodies Created The World's Greatest Encyclopedia is a 2009 popular history book by new media researcher and writer Andrew Lih.
+
+\cite{Tkacz2014}
+"As historical artifacts, encyclopedias have regularly offered great insight into the periods in which they were written. They tell us about what constitutes knowledge at a particular time as well as how the various bodies of knowledge were thought to relate to one another." (p.4)
 \end{comment}
 
 %************************************************************************