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Scholarly Editing is distinguished here from all other editing by declaring the two rules that scholarly editing requires: to know and make known all relevant facts and to exercise informed judgment while following explicit principles for and details of the editorial work.
P. Shillingsburg
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The Scholarly Edition as Digital Experience
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.
Wim Van Mierlo
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The Limits of Scholarly Editing
Textual CulturesThe goals of scholarly editing are limited by what can be accomplished in reality. What can be hoped for or aimed at may be the inspiration, but not the goal, of scholarly editing. Well-argued disagreements among scholars demonstrates that variation in interests, methods, and values for documents, texts, works, history and art, both place perfection ...
Peter L. Shillingsburg
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Reliable social scholarly editing
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, 2016If Scholarly Editing means the exercise of textual criticism for the production of digital archives and editions, then crowdsourcing may produce more problems than solutions because a digital archive is a surrogate for material documents and a digital scholarly edition is a precise argument about the archive.
P. Shillingsburg
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Scholarly Editing in Perspective
Scholarly Editing in Perspective offers a critical reflection on the theory and methods of textual editing, as a contribution to a wider, comparative understanding of editorial practice. The analysis, written in a cogent, concise and accessible manner, offers an insight into the textual-philosophical principles and foundations of scholarly editing fromWim Van Mierlo
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The rapid development of human genome editing (HGE) techniques evokes an urgent need for forward-looking deliberation regarding the aims, processes, and governance of research. The framework of anticipatory governance (AG) may serve this need.
John P Nelson, Christopher Thomas Scott
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Canadian Slavonic Papers, 2020
This article raises the question of the continuity of national traditions of scholarly editing (from print to digital), and points to the possibility of overcoming the “inertia of tradition.” It first considers the transition of the editing and ...
Dmytro Yesypenko
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This article raises the question of the continuity of national traditions of scholarly editing (from print to digital), and points to the possibility of overcoming the “inertia of tradition.” It first considers the transition of the editing and ...
Dmytro Yesypenko
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Open, Equitable, and Minimal: Teaching Digital Scholarly Editing North and South
Digital Humanities Quarterly, 2022In this paper, we present our preliminary reflections on whether minimal computing as a practice can extend beyond computing done under some technological constraints to served as a common ground between different digital humanities research dynamics in ...
Raffaele Viglianti +3 more
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