Book Series
- Digital Humanities Series vol. 4
- ISSN Print: 2054-2410
- ISSN Digital: 2054-2429
Copyright
Matthew James Driscoll; Elena Pierazzo; Copyright of each individual chapter is maintained by the author(s).Published On
2016-08-15ISBN
Language
- English
Print Length
290 pages (xvi + 274)Dimensions
Weight
Media
OCLC Number
1030403495LCCN
2019452724BIC
- H
- U
- D
BISAC
- LIT000000
- COM087000
- COM065000
LCC
- Z286.E43
Keywords
- Digital scholarly editing
- digital humanities
- textual scholarship
- computer technology
- theories
- practices
Digital Scholarly Editing
Theories and Practices
- Matthew James Driscoll (editor)
- Elena Pierazzo (editor)
Endorsements
The quality of these essays is uniform and high; they represent the state of the art in this area. The essays range over all the important technical and intellectual debates in digital scholarly editing and provide an excellent introduction to the field as well as a report on where we are. There are some fine discussions of the thorny theoretical topics as well as contributions that discuss particular projects without falling into the tedious show-and-tell format: we always hear why something matters.
Professor Gabriel Egan
Director of the Centre for Textual Studies at De Montfort University
Contents
- Matthew James Driscoll
- Elena Pierazzo
2. What is a Scholarly Digital Edition?
(pp. 19–40)- Patrick Sahle
- Elena Pierazzo
- Marina Buzzoni
5. Barely Beyond the Book?
(pp. 83–106)- Joris van Zundert
6. Exogenetic Digital Editing and Enactive Cognition
(pp. 107–118)- Dirk Van Hulle
- Krista Stinne Greve Rasmussen
- Ray Siemens
- Constance Crompton
- Daniel Powell
- Alyssa Arbuckle
- Maggie Shirley
9. A Catalogue of Digital Editions
(pp. 161–182)- Greta Franzini
- Melissa Terras
- Simon Mahony
- Camille Desenclos
11. Beyond Variants: Some Digital Desiderata for the Critical Apparatus of Ancient Greek and Latin Texts
(pp. 201–218)- Cynthia Damon
- Roberto Rosselli Del Turco