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Theorizing the Digital Scholarly Edition

Literature Compass, 2010
Abstract The scholarly edition has traditionally been conceived of as hierarchically ordered downwards from a text, buffered and augmented by apparatuses as subordinate editorial paratexts. Of old, the paratexts used to stand in a hermeneutic relationship – broadly, a commentary relationship – to the edition text.
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The Scholarly Edition as Digital Experience

Textual Cultures, 2022
What if the makers of digital scholarly editions reimagined the edition as an exhibition? There is no shortage of vision when it comes to reimagining the digital edition for the future, but innovation always lags behind vision. This affects in particular the call for reader-oriented editions.
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Minimal Functionality for Digital Scholarly Editions

2018
In this paper, we are analysing the quality of use of digital scholarly editions (DSEs), via usability testing. We do a competitor analyses in which a small sample of target users is gathered in a usability lab, asked to answer research questions via different research tools, and finally to rate the experience.
Federico Caria, Brigitte Mathiak
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Annotation in Digital Scholarly Editions

Annotation in digital scholarly editions (of historical documents, literary works, letters, etc.) has long been recognized as an important desideratum, but has also proven to be an elusive ideal. In so far as annotation functionality is available, it is usually developed for a single edition and cannot easily be deployed elsewhere.
Boot, P., Haentjens Dekker, R.
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