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Allison Muri offers a cogent account of her experience as a scholarly editor working in a digital environment. It is a cautionary tale, and it gives cause for alarm. A young scholar with a bright idea about how to make the most of the latest technology will encounter formidable obstacles—legal, economic, institutional, and even cultural—for she must overcome deeply entrenched views about scholarly communication. What is it to edit a text in the digital era? Ms. Muri argues that such editing goes far beyond the bibliographical rigor required in a printed edition, for it opens up endless possibilities of relating text to context—that is, to the entire world in which a work came into being. In her case, she aspires to recreate the world of Grub Street in eighteenth-century London, a subculture shaped by the physical structure of the city, by the conditions in the printing and publishing trades, by the corpus of contemporary literature, and by the boundaries of the collective imagination. Allison Muri’s Grub Street Project epitomizes editing of the kind that can fire the imagination of “digital natives” familiar with texts “born digital.” But they exist in a subculture of their own, composed of uncomprehending older colleagues, limited resources, and institutional obstacles—above all, tenure.

The great strength of The Grub Street Project is its appeal to the sense of sight. It is intensely visual. By helping readers to imagine eighteenth-century London in their mind’s eye, it will permit them to roam around in its literature with a keener sensitivity. At its base, it consists of a palimpsest of maps. Beginning with Richard Horwood’s Plan of the Cities of London and Westminster from 1799, it will use geographical coordinates to impose map upon map and show how the cultural topography evolved over time. Then it will permit the user to zoom in on particular neighborhoods, and it will populate the entire urban landscape with contemporary images of public spaces, buildings, streets, and street life. Detailed contemporary directories will make it possible to locate activities at precise addresses, especially in areas where the book trades proliferated and writers congregated—Cripplegate, Moorfields, Fleet Street, Covent Garden. The most familiar names—Bedlam, Billingsgate, Grub Street itself—light up associations in the modern reader’s mind, but to embed them in an eighteenth-century setting, one must navigate through the digitized material provided by the website. To the inhabitants of the eighteenth century, that topography also had a metaphorical character created by the authors who made it come to life: Defoe, Pope, Johnson, Swift, Fielding, Gay, and the lesser writers of The Grub Street Journal . Allison Muri’s project will therefore include links to their works. In editing them, with rigorous respect for the original editions, she will edit London itself. The result should be not only a magnificent work of literary scholarship but something close to what the historians of the Annales school idealized as “ histoire totale .”

Questions & Answers

how did you get 1640
Noor Reply
If auger is pair are the roots of equation x2+5x-3=0
Peter Reply
Wayne and Dennis like to ride the bike path from Riverside Park to the beach. Dennis’s speed is seven miles per hour faster than Wayne’s speed, so it takes Wayne 2 hours to ride to the beach while it takes Dennis 1.5 hours for the ride. Find the speed of both bikers.
MATTHEW Reply
420
Sharon
from theory: distance [miles] = speed [mph] × time [hours] info #1 speed_Dennis × 1.5 = speed_Wayne × 2 => speed_Wayne = 0.75 × speed_Dennis (i) info #2 speed_Dennis = speed_Wayne + 7 [mph] (ii) use (i) in (ii) => [...] speed_Dennis = 28 mph speed_Wayne = 21 mph
George
Let W be Wayne's speed in miles per hour and D be Dennis's speed in miles per hour. We know that W + 7 = D and W * 2 = D * 1.5. Substituting the first equation into the second: W * 2 = (W + 7) * 1.5 W * 2 = W * 1.5 + 7 * 1.5 0.5 * W = 7 * 1.5 W = 7 * 3 or 21 W is 21 D = W + 7 D = 21 + 7 D = 28
Salma
Devon is 32 32​​ years older than his son, Milan. The sum of both their ages is 54 54​. Using the variables d d​ and m m​ to represent the ages of Devon and Milan, respectively, write a system of equations to describe this situation. Enter the equations below, separated by a comma.
Aaron Reply
find product (-6m+6) ( 3m²+4m-3)
SIMRAN Reply
-42m²+60m-18
Salma
what is the solution
bill
how did you arrive at this answer?
bill
-24m+3+3mÁ^2
Susan
i really want to learn
Amira
I only got 42 the rest i don't know how to solve it. Please i need help from anyone to help me improve my solving mathematics please
Amira
Hw did u arrive to this answer.
Aphelele
hi
Bajemah
-6m(3mA²+4m-3)+6(3mA²+4m-3) =-18m²A²-24m²+18m+18mA²+24m-18 Rearrange like items -18m²A²-24m²+42m+18A²-18
Salma
complete the table of valuesfor each given equatio then graph. 1.x+2y=3
Jovelyn Reply
x=3-2y
Salma
y=x+3/2
Salma
Hi
Enock
given that (7x-5):(2+4x)=8:7find the value of x
Nandala
3x-12y=18
Kelvin
please why isn't that the 0is in ten thousand place
Grace Reply
please why is it that the 0is in the place of ten thousand
Grace
Send the example to me here and let me see
Stephen
A meditation garden is in the shape of a right triangle, with one leg 7 feet. The length of the hypotenuse is one more than the length of one of the other legs. Find the lengths of the hypotenuse and the other leg
Marry Reply
how far
Abubakar
cool u
Enock
state in which quadrant or on which axis each of the following angles given measure. in standard position would lie 89°
Abegail Reply
hello
BenJay
hi
Method
I am eliacin, I need your help in maths
Rood
how can I help
Sir
hmm can we speak here?
Amoon
however, may I ask you some questions about Algarba?
Amoon
hi
Enock
what the last part of the problem mean?
Roger
The Jones family took a 15 mile canoe ride down the Indian River in three hours. After lunch, the return trip back up the river took five hours. Find the rate, in mph, of the canoe in still water and the rate of the current.
cameron Reply
Shakir works at a computer store. His weekly pay will be either a fixed amount, $925, or $500 plus 12% of his total sales. How much should his total sales be for his variable pay option to exceed the fixed amount of $925.
mahnoor Reply
I'm guessing, but it's somewhere around $4335.00 I think
Lewis
12% of sales will need to exceed 925 - 500, or 425 to exceed fixed amount option. What amount of sales does that equal? 425 ÷ (12÷100) = 3541.67. So the answer is sales greater than 3541.67. Check: Sales = 3542 Commission 12%=425.04 Pay = 500 + 425.04 = 925.04. 925.04 > 925.00
Munster
difference between rational and irrational numbers
Arundhati Reply
When traveling to Great Britain, Bethany exchanged $602 US dollars into £515 British pounds. How many pounds did she receive for each US dollar?
Jakoiya Reply
how to reduced echelon form
Solomon Reply
Jazmine trained for 3 hours on Saturday. She ran 8 miles and then biked 24 miles. Her biking speed is 4 mph faster than her running speed. What is her running speed?
Zack Reply
d=r×t the equation would be 8/r+24/r+4=3 worked out
Sheirtina
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Source:  OpenStax, Online humanities scholarship: the shape of things to come. OpenStax CNX. May 08, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11199/1.1
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