Digital Book History
on fields of digital history: https://inclusivehistorian.com/digital-history/
list of resources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1f5Pgp-4kWX5lycmQRkj9w7gWcMlINqmjId1VuQjxXeY/edit
http://ccnmtl.columbia.edu/projects/shakespeareandthebook/studyenv/pub00.html
Jon Lamb, "Digital Resources for Early Modern Studies," SEL 2018
Early Print: https://earlyprint.org/
Sonia Massai and Heidi Craig, Paratexts
Liza Blake, http://digitalcavendish.org/original-research/locating-margaret-cavendish/ -- locating Margaret CAvendish; her books are all over because they were cheap
Jim Mussell, The Nineteenth-Century Press in the Digital Age
Stephen Pumfrey et al., "Experiments in 17th century English: manual versus automatic conceptual history," Literary and Linguistic Computing -- pairs with Shore 2019
Kathryn Rudy, "Dirty Books"
Visualizing a library: https://uclab.fh-potsdam.de/ff/#modus=distribution?level=0?filter=null?auswahl=Q20
Networks
how do material texts intersect with this work?
Jenna Townend, “Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches to Early Modern Networks: The Case of George Herbert and his Imitators,” Literature Compass (2016)
Michael Gavin, “Historical Text Networks: The Sociology of Early English Criticism,” Eighteenth-Century Studies (2016)
Ruth Ahnert, “Protestant Letter Networks in the Reign of Mary I: A Quantitative Approach,” ELH (2015)
Evan Bourke, “Female Involvement, Membership, and Centrality: A Social Network Analysis of the Hartlib Circle,” Literature Compass (2017)
Galloway 2012 for a critique of social network visualizations
Exploring Big Historical Data -- http://www.themacroscope.org/2.0/ -- includes companion website with visualizations
News Networks in Early Modern Europe
Early Modern Digital Studies book out in 2016
Blaine Greteman, Shakosphere: https://shakeosphere.lib.uiowa.edu/index.jsp
Sherman, "The Social Life of a Book"
http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/vol/11/2/000289/000289.html
SNAC: https://snaccooperative.org/?redirected=1
Jason Scott Warren, "reconstructing manuscript networks"
Big Data
Priya Joshi, "Quantitative Method, Literary History"
Simon Eliot, "Very Necessary but Not Quite Sufficient"
Historians Macroscope http://www.themacroscope.org/2.0/
Robots Reading Vogue: http://dh.library.yale.edu/projects/vogue/
Cliometrics; see Humphrey Moseley and the section on Gants' paper -- footnote 2 summarizes use of quantitative data to study book trade to that time
Topic Modelling, http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.84.7371&rep=rep1&type=pdf
Natalie Houston: https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/victorianstudies.56.3.498#metadata_info_tab_contents
Storytelling
Robert Darnton website: http://www.robertdarnton.org/
Locked chest of 17c letters: http://brienne.org/
Facsimiles
https://twitter.com/SocAntiquaries/status/1183774797844623360 "Charles Stothard was commissioned to draw the Bayeux Tapestry for the Society in 1816. During his 3 visits to Bayeux he also made small plaster casts - by taking wax impressions of the linen - to capture the detail of the embroidery. Of course, this would never be allowed today!"
Lazarus Project: https://www.lazarusprojectimaging.com/
Early Manuscripts Electronic Library: http://emel-library.org/
Science
- XRF testing of pigments on a manuscript initial; seems suspicious, not in the style of the period, testing showed they weren't
x-ray scans of scrolls: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2019/oct/03/ancient-scrolls-charred-by-vesuvius-could-be-read-once-again