This article discusses the importance and relevance of textual editing for students and scholars of historical literatures, especially Middle English texts. By surveying the different types of editions necessary for studying Middle English literature, the author argues that in the "digital age," an understanding of The Edition is necessary, not only for the preservation of cultural texts, but also for the contribution and understanding of interpretations fundamental to literary disciplines
Discusses the editing of Scottish literary texts, specifically recent editions of Walter Scott and J...
A generation ago, many Shakespearean scholars simply accepted the versions of the play that they wer...
With the triumph of the codex, medieval literature became more deeply hermeneutic in character. A va...
This article discusses the importance and relevance of textual editing for students and scholars of ...
Despite the importance of the subject to the discipline of Middle English studies, little research h...
Covering the changes in Shakespeare editorial theory and practice over the decades between the publi...
This thesis explores how literary editing for the dramatic publication was developed in seventeenth-...
This project explores the ways in which Middle English manuscript texts are re-formed by linguistic,...
This paper describes the electronic editing of the Middle English material housed in the Hunterian ...
These fifteen essays, all published here for the first time, explore issues related to the editing a...
This article is a textual analysis that compares features of the 1807 edition of The Book of the Duc...
This paper discusses approaches to digital editing, focusing on two projects, ReScript and Early Eng...
Responds to a recent article by Peter Shillingsburg (in Studies in Bibliography , 1991)on the taxono...
This thesis considers the intersection of the manuscript and its literature through an examination o...
This essay offers an insight into the way digital editions of medieval texts can be employed to repl...
Discusses the editing of Scottish literary texts, specifically recent editions of Walter Scott and J...
A generation ago, many Shakespearean scholars simply accepted the versions of the play that they wer...
With the triumph of the codex, medieval literature became more deeply hermeneutic in character. A va...
This article discusses the importance and relevance of textual editing for students and scholars of ...
Despite the importance of the subject to the discipline of Middle English studies, little research h...
Covering the changes in Shakespeare editorial theory and practice over the decades between the publi...
This thesis explores how literary editing for the dramatic publication was developed in seventeenth-...
This project explores the ways in which Middle English manuscript texts are re-formed by linguistic,...
This paper describes the electronic editing of the Middle English material housed in the Hunterian ...
These fifteen essays, all published here for the first time, explore issues related to the editing a...
This article is a textual analysis that compares features of the 1807 edition of The Book of the Duc...
This paper discusses approaches to digital editing, focusing on two projects, ReScript and Early Eng...
Responds to a recent article by Peter Shillingsburg (in Studies in Bibliography , 1991)on the taxono...
This thesis considers the intersection of the manuscript and its literature through an examination o...
This essay offers an insight into the way digital editions of medieval texts can be employed to repl...
Discusses the editing of Scottish literary texts, specifically recent editions of Walter Scott and J...
A generation ago, many Shakespearean scholars simply accepted the versions of the play that they wer...
With the triumph of the codex, medieval literature became more deeply hermeneutic in character. A va...