No one doubted the wisdom of gathering information about current use of historical sources when the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and the American Council of Learned Societies launched the Historical Documents Study two years ago. The Commission would learn more about the context for its own decisions to support projects that publish and preserve historical documents. True to its mission to lead and educate in matters of the nation\u27s documentary heritage, the Commission would also inform other agencies and individuals responsible for similar decisions affecting historical sources and research. But a counterclaim disturbed the unanimity. Within and around the Commission an argument about the relative merits of gr...
This paper is an effort to think about something different than the creation of documentary editions...
Spring and Summer 2008, Volume 30, Numbers 1 & 2 If You Have to Explain It, Is it Still Funny?, Be...
Waters's paper given November 8, 2008, at the Forum on Academic Publishing in the Humanities
Within the past six months a debate has ensued about the utility of documentary letterpress editions...
The American historical editing profession has a rich and varied history of publishing projects rang...
Twenty years ago, at the first annual meeting of the Association for Documentary Editing in Princeto...
When I began work on this paper, I started from the assumption that I would discover a range of argu...
This first convention of our associtation invites observations on the present state of documentary e...
The practice of documentary editing is concerned with the publication of editions of letters, diarie...
The ADE is at an important crossroads. Much has changed in the documentary editing profession in the...
Historians usually draw their evidence from written documents of some sort. Since ancient times, sch...
While digital humanists have often discussed how digital editing develops students’ abilities to rea...
Historical editing has come far in recent years. Editors now have their own organization; they have ...
Documentary editing has achieved unprecedented importance in American historical scholarship since t...
At its meeting on November 13 and 14, held at the United States Supreme Court, the National Historic...
This paper is an effort to think about something different than the creation of documentary editions...
Spring and Summer 2008, Volume 30, Numbers 1 & 2 If You Have to Explain It, Is it Still Funny?, Be...
Waters's paper given November 8, 2008, at the Forum on Academic Publishing in the Humanities
Within the past six months a debate has ensued about the utility of documentary letterpress editions...
The American historical editing profession has a rich and varied history of publishing projects rang...
Twenty years ago, at the first annual meeting of the Association for Documentary Editing in Princeto...
When I began work on this paper, I started from the assumption that I would discover a range of argu...
This first convention of our associtation invites observations on the present state of documentary e...
The practice of documentary editing is concerned with the publication of editions of letters, diarie...
The ADE is at an important crossroads. Much has changed in the documentary editing profession in the...
Historians usually draw their evidence from written documents of some sort. Since ancient times, sch...
While digital humanists have often discussed how digital editing develops students’ abilities to rea...
Historical editing has come far in recent years. Editors now have their own organization; they have ...
Documentary editing has achieved unprecedented importance in American historical scholarship since t...
At its meeting on November 13 and 14, held at the United States Supreme Court, the National Historic...
This paper is an effort to think about something different than the creation of documentary editions...
Spring and Summer 2008, Volume 30, Numbers 1 & 2 If You Have to Explain It, Is it Still Funny?, Be...
Waters's paper given November 8, 2008, at the Forum on Academic Publishing in the Humanities