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Despite the hype about the digital revolution, traditional print forms are still very much with us. This timely book offers a reconsideration of the many complex issues surrounding the electronic representation of text now and in the future.

This is a study of the forms and institutions of print - newspapers, books, scholarly editions, publishing, libraries - as they relate to and are changed by emergent digital forms and institutions. In the early 1990s hypertext was briefly hailed as a liberating writing tool for non-linear creation. Fast forward no more than a decade, and we are reading old books from screens. It is, however, the newspaper, for around two hundred years print's most powerful mass vehicle, whose economy persuasively shapes its electronic remediation through huge digitization initiatives, dominated by a handful of centralizing service providers, funded and wrapped round by online advertising. The error is to assume a culture of total replacement. The Internet is just another information space, sharing characteristics that have always defined such spaces - wonderfully effective and unstable, loaded with valuable resources and misinformation; that is, both good and bad. This is why it is important that writers, critics, publishers and librarians - in modern parlance, the knowledge providers - be critically engaged in shaping and regulating cyberspace, and not merely the passive instruments or unreflecting users of the digital tools in our hands.
Preface vii
Acknowledgements xiii
After Print?
1(28)
San Serriffe
1(13)
Prophesying the Death of the Book
14(15)
A Future and a Past for Newsprint
29(30)
Newspaper Publishing in the Online World
30(18)
Digitizing Historic Newspapers
48(11)
The Cultural Work of Editing
59(30)
Books, Texts and Work-sites
59(20)
Information and Noise: Text Encoding
79(10)
New Modes of Publishing
89(30)
Journal Publishing
93(7)
Book Publishing
100(19)
The Universal Library
119(36)
A Brief History of Libraries
120(6)
Computerization in Libraries
126(6)
Digitization and Scholarship
132(3)
Digital Libraries and Mass Digitization
135(20)
Durable Futures
155(28)
Preservation
155(16)
After Print
171(12)
Bibliography 183(12)
Index 195
Marilyn Deegan is Director of Research Development, Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King's College London as well as the Co-Director of the AHRB ICT Methods Network. She is editor of the journal Literary and Linguistics Computing and has worked on numerous digitization projects in the arts and humanities. Kathryn Sutherland is Professor of Bibliography and Textual Criticism at St Anne's College, Oxford. She teaches and researches on bibliography, textual criticism, Romantic period writings, Scottish Enlightenment, textual theory and Jane Austen.