New Directions in Digital Textual Studies
Book History, Scholarly Editing and Curation in Conversation
Sorozatcím: Bloomsbury Studies in Digital Cultures;
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A termék adatai:
- Kiadó Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
- Megjelenés dátuma 2026. február 19.
- Kötetek száma Paperback
- ISBN 9781350406766
- Kötéstípus Puhakötés
- Terjedelem336 oldal
- Méret 232x154x24 mm
- Súly 380 g
- Nyelv angol
- Illusztrációk 41 bw illus, 4 tables 700
Kategóriák
Rövid leírás:
Bringing together book historians, textual editors, and new media theorists, this is an engaging and wide-ranging examination of the interactions between the history of the book and digital humanities.
TöbbHosszú leírás:
The overlaps between the digital humanities and textual studies-two major scholarly fields which share common interests and methods-still demand further theoretical reflections. This volume brings together an exciting collection of book historians, textual editors, curators, and new media theorists to provide templates for and methodological reflections on how digital textual studies research can be done.
Featuring contributions from a variety of early career and experienced scholars and practitioners, this volume uses case studies and methodological provocations to open up digital textual studies, as well as taking a step back to consider the broader theoretical and pedagogical implications they raise. In doing so, it sets the agenda for pragmatic, digital text-based scholarship and methods, providing useful tools and frameworks for anyone in need of an introduction to textual studies that is grounded in digital research and new media.
Tartalomjegyzék:
Introduction: This is Not a Book
Christopher Ohge (University of London, UK) & Kristen Schuster (University of Southampton, UK)
Section I. Methods and Case Studies
1. Cataloguing the Enlightenment: Legacy Practices of Organised Knowledge
Zoe Screti (University of Oxford, UK)
2. Editing Authenticity in the Manuscript Text: Prefaces, Diplomatic Transcriptions, and Photographs
Geoffrey Turnovsky (University of Washington, USA)
3. The Printing Surface in the Age of Digital Reproduction
Giles Bergel (University of Oxford, UK)
4. From Bookshelves to Bytes: Navigating the Digital Transformation of Writers' Libraries
Anke Jaspers (University of Graz, Austria) & Martina Schï¿1⁄2nbï¿1⁄2chler (Independent Scholar)
5. A Graph Database Approach to Editing and Publishing Infinitely Recombinant Digital Texts
Miller C. Prosser (University of Chicago, USA)
6. Pragmatic Digital Editing, Data Analysis, and Creative-Critical Practices: The Case of the Anti-Slavery Anthology The Bow in the Cloud (1834)
Christopher Ohge (University of London, UK)
7. Extracting for Experience: Material Annotation and its Affordances in Textual Studies
Mary Erica Zimmer (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA)
8. Reading the edited collection, distantly: some trends in British theological publishing in the twentieth century
Peter Webster (University of Southampton, UK)
Section II. Interdisciplinary Reflections
9. Unlocking Literary Heritage: From Cabinets of Curiosities to Digital Story-Telling
Wim Van Mierlo (Loughborough University, UK)
10. Folklore Archives in the Digital Age
Karoline Strittmater (Independent Scholar)
11. Teaching Truman with Hypertext Methods: Project Whistlestop over Two Decades
Ashney V. Randle (University of Missouri, USA), Logan F. Thompson (University of Missouri, USA), Renee M. Jones (University of Missouri, USA), & Sarah A. Buchanan (University of Missouri, USA)
12. Digital Publishing Practices in Museums: Old Habits, New Platforms
Ellen Charlesworth (Durham University, UK) & Claire Warwick (Durham University, UK)
13. Describing New Media: Strategies and Recommendations for Teaching Structured Data in Multi-Disciplinary Humanities Contexts
Kristen Schuster (University of Southampton, UK)
14. Honey, AI Shrunk the Archive: Artificial Intelligence as Compression Algorithm
Jon Ippolito (University of Maine, USA)
15. Book History for the Future: Connecting Communications Media
Leah Henrickson (University of Queensland, Australia)
Afterword: On Textual Editing and Digital Scholarly Curation
Dirk Van Hulle (University of Oxford, UK)