For the full article, please visit Project MUSE or click here (subscribers only). Mobile phones and tablets have become important platforms for reading, but literary works migrating to online archives do not now incorporate responsive design for these platforms because the digital humanities relies on theoretical models for display based on desktop monitors and multiple browser windows. Documentary online editions of medieval texts such as the Book of Margery Kempe demand features that interact with layers of annotation and multiple witnesses. Small screens and new editorial strategies can offer these elements in transparent layers that return text display to a unitary page and a unified reading experience.RésuméLes téléphones portables e...
Leiden: Brill, 2013. Edited by Claire Clivaz, University of Lausanne, Andrew Gregory, University o...
The article provides an overview of the symposium of the same name held at the University of Oregon ...
This essay offers an insight into the way digital editions of medieval texts can be employed to repl...
Over the past three decades, the history of reading has become an increasingly lively field of schol...
In this study, interviews reveal that sustained discontinuous reading constitutes a distinctive rea...
Four international writers are examined by seven scholars who consider the effects of digital techno...
Over the past three decades, the history of reading has become an increasingly lively field of schol...
For the full article, please visit Project MUSE or click here (subscribers only). How are digitize...
Humanities scholars increasingly use mobile devices such as laptops, iPhones, and iPads in their pr...
This article surveys aspects of medieval ‘publishing’ practice in manuscript format and relates them...
AbstractThis article is focused on the possibilities and usability of mobile devices for the study o...
The physical medium signifies. Any document type within any medium offers a semiotic setting of its ...
ABSTRACT In this article I present an overview of the major changes in the literary field due to the...
International audienceThis article discusses the limitations and benefits of resorting to digital to...
Much ink has been spilt worrying over the death of the book. It may be, however, that we find oursel...
Leiden: Brill, 2013. Edited by Claire Clivaz, University of Lausanne, Andrew Gregory, University o...
The article provides an overview of the symposium of the same name held at the University of Oregon ...
This essay offers an insight into the way digital editions of medieval texts can be employed to repl...
Over the past three decades, the history of reading has become an increasingly lively field of schol...
In this study, interviews reveal that sustained discontinuous reading constitutes a distinctive rea...
Four international writers are examined by seven scholars who consider the effects of digital techno...
Over the past three decades, the history of reading has become an increasingly lively field of schol...
For the full article, please visit Project MUSE or click here (subscribers only). How are digitize...
Humanities scholars increasingly use mobile devices such as laptops, iPhones, and iPads in their pr...
This article surveys aspects of medieval ‘publishing’ practice in manuscript format and relates them...
AbstractThis article is focused on the possibilities and usability of mobile devices for the study o...
The physical medium signifies. Any document type within any medium offers a semiotic setting of its ...
ABSTRACT In this article I present an overview of the major changes in the literary field due to the...
International audienceThis article discusses the limitations and benefits of resorting to digital to...
Much ink has been spilt worrying over the death of the book. It may be, however, that we find oursel...
Leiden: Brill, 2013. Edited by Claire Clivaz, University of Lausanne, Andrew Gregory, University o...
The article provides an overview of the symposium of the same name held at the University of Oregon ...
This essay offers an insight into the way digital editions of medieval texts can be employed to repl...