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ISBN13: | 9781517916688 |
ISBN10: | 1517916682 |
Kötéstípus: | Puhakötés |
Terjedelem: | 312 oldal |
Méret: | 216x140x15 mm |
Súly: | 368 g |
Nyelv: | angol |
Illusztrációk: | 31 black and white illustrations |
693 |
Futures of Digital Scholarly Editing
GBP 23.99
Kattintson ide a feliratkozáshoz
A Prosperónál jelenleg nincsen raktáron.
Exploring technology, ethics, and culture to unlock digital scholarship’s future
Futures of Digital Scholarly Editing navigates the ever-shifting terrain of digital academia, examining practical and ethical considerations as technology continues to evolve. In this indispensable collection, digital humanities practitioners and scholars work with a wide range of archival materials to confront key challenges surrounding the adaptation and sustainability of digital editorial projects as well as their societal impact.
Broaching essential questions at the nexus of technology and culture, Futures of Digital Scholarly Editing is organized around three principal frameworks: access, sustainability, and interoperability; ethics and community involvement; and the evolution of textual scholarship. From addressing outdated technical infrastructures to fostering new collaborations, this volume serves as a beacon guiding scholars and institutions through the complexities of digital editing in an era of profound technological and societal transformation.
Contributors: Stephanie P. Browner, The New School; Julia Flanders, Northeastern U; Ed Folsom, U of Iowa; Nicole Gray, U of Nebraska–Lincoln; Cassidy Holahan, U of Nevada, Las Vegas; Fotis Jannidis, U of Würzburg; Aylin Malcolm, U of Guelph; Sarah Lynn Patterson, U of Massachusetts Amherst; Elena Pierazzo, U of Tours; K.J. Rawson, Northeastern U; Whitney Trettien, U of Pennsylvania; John Unsworth, U of Virginia; Dirk Van Hulle, U of Oxford; Robert Warrior, U of Kansas; Marta L. Werner, Loyola U Chicago.
Retail e-book files for this title are screen-reader friendly with images accompanied by short alt text and/or extended descriptions.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Matt Cohen, Kenneth M. Price, and Caterina Bernardini
Part I. Transformations of Textual Scholarship
1. Distant Editing: The Challenges of Computational Methods to the Theory and Practice of Textual Scholarship
Elena Pierazzo
2. Beyond Social Editing: Peer-to-Peer Systems for Digital Editions
Julia Flanders
3. Creative Ecologies: The Complete Works Edition in a Digital Paradigm
Dirk Van Hulle
4. Charles W. Chesnutt and the Generous Edition: Collations, Annotations, and Genetic Histories
Stephanie P. Browner
5. Computational Literary Studies and Scholarly Editing
Fotis Jannidis
6. The Walt Whitman Archive at a Quarter of a Century
Ed Folsom
Part II. The Convergence of Digital Archiving and Scholarly Editing
7. Digital Archival Ethics: Representation, Access, and Care in Digital Environments
K.J. Rawson
8. Categories of Freedom: Colored Conventions, End-Movement Discourse, and the Nineteenth-Century Black Protest Tradition
Sarah Lynn Patterson
9. Not Reading the Edition
Cassidy Holahan, Aylin Malcolm, and Whitney Trettien
10. Indigenous Publishing, Scholarly Editing, and the Digital Future
Robert Warrior
11. Preserving the Walt Whitman Archive
Nicole Gray
12. Unsilent Springs: Dearchivizing the Data Choirs of Dickinson’s Time-Shifted Birds
Marta L. Werner
Afterword
John Unsworth
Contributors
Index