SEENET: Society for Early English and Norse Electronic Texts

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Currently limited to: subject medieval_and_renaissance_studies Medieval and Renaissance Studies x
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1. Cover image for 'William of Palerne'
An Electronic Edition
Gerrit H. V. Bunt
An interactive exploration of a medieval romantic poem
Format Publication year Price Status Purchasing option
Compact Disk (1-Pack) 2002 $77.50 Available Add Compact Disk (1-Pack) for "William of Palerne" to Cart
2. Cover image for 'The
Cambridge, Trinity College, MS B.15.17 (W)
Volume: 2
William Langland
New in SEENET: The second volume in The "Piers Plowman" Electronic Archive series
Format Publication year Price Status Purchasing option
Compact Disk (1-Pack) 2000 $80.00 Available Add Compact Disk (1-Pack) for "The "Piers Plowman" Electronic Archive, Vol. 2" to Cart
3. Cover image for 'The
Corpus Christi College, Oxford, MS 201 (F)
William Langland
The first in a series of documentary editions of the "Piers Plowman" Electronic Archive
Format Publication year Price Status Purchasing option
Compact Disk (1-Pack) 2000 $77.50 Available Add Compact Disk (1-Pack) for "The "Piers Plowman" Electronic Archive, Vol. 1" to Cart
Currently limited to: subject medieval_and_renaissance_studies Medieval and Renaissance Studies x

The University of Michigan Press announces the establishment of the Society for Early English and Norse Electronic Texts, or SEENET. The Society will solicit, produce, and disseminate scholarly electronic editions of Old Norse, Old English, and Middle English texts. Combining the full capabilities of computer technology with the highest standards of traditional scholarly editing, SEENET will publish machine-readable texts with reliable introductory materials, annotations, and apparatus.

Electronic editions offer historians, literary critics, linguists, and editors exciting new ways to study texts. Unlike printed books, electronic texts lend themselves to sophisticated searches, concordancing, collations, and other forms of text retrieval. Editors may present in full both "good" and "bad" manuscripts, permitting literary historians to study the history of the reception of the text as shown by scribal changes or marginal annotations. Comprehensive databases from a wide variety of dialect regions will be available to historical linguists for phonological, morphological, and syntactical studies. Students of stylistics will be able to make more complex studies of metrical, lexical, or syntactic patterning than are possible with printed texts.

The extremely flexible nature of an electronic text is also ideal for representing complex textual traditions, even of works like Piers Plowman, where editors confront high degrees of ambiguity and uncertainty. Electronic editions will accommodate scholars who prefer "best text" documentary editions as well as those who want the best possible modern editorial reconstructions.

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SEENET: Society for Early English and Norse Electronic Texts

The University of Michigan Press announces the establishment of the Society for Early English and Norse Electronic Texts, or SEENET. The Society will solicit, produce, and disseminate scholarly electronic editions of Old Norse, Old English, and Middle English texts. Combining the full capabilities of computer technology with the highest standards of traditional scholarly editing, SEENET will publish machine-readable texts with reliable introductory materials, annotations, and apparatus.

Electronic editions offer historians, literary critics, linguists, and editors exciting new ways to study texts. Unlike printed books, electronic texts lend themselves to sophisticated searches, concordancing, collations, and other forms of text retrieval. Editors may present in full both "good" and "bad" manuscripts, permitting literary historians to study the history of the reception of the text as shown by scribal changes or marginal annotations. Comprehensive databases from a wide variety of dialect regions will be available to historical linguists for phonological, morphological, and syntactical studies. Students of stylistics will be able to make more complex studies of metrical, lexical, or syntactic patterning than are possible with printed texts.

The extremely flexible nature of an electronic text is also ideal for representing complex textual traditions, even of works like Piers Plowman, where editors confront high degrees of ambiguity and uncertainty. Electronic editions will accommodate scholars who prefer "best text" documentary editions as well as those who want the best possible modern editorial reconstructions.


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Hoyt N. Duggan, University of Virginia

Thorlac Turville-Petre, University of Nottingham

Editorial Board
Peter Baker, University of Virginia

A. S. G. Edwards, University of Victoria

Anthony Faulkes, University of Birmingham

Ralph Hanna III, University of California, Riverside

Judith Jesch, University of Nottingham

William Miller, University of Michigan

John Price-Wilkin, University of Michigan

Joseph Wittig, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Series Editors

Hoyt N. Duggan, University of Virginia

Thorlac Turville-Petre, University of Nottingham

Editorial Board
Peter Baker, University of Virginia

A. S. G. Edwards, University of Victoria

Anthony Faulkes, University of Birmingham

Ralph Hanna III, University of California, Riverside

Judith Jesch, University of Nottingham

William Miller, University of Michigan

John Price-Wilkin, University of Michigan

Joseph Wittig, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill


Inquiries about the Society may be sent to:

Professor Hoyt N. Duggan
Department of English
University of Virginia
Charlottesville, VA 22903
hnd@virginia.edu

For more information, visit the SEENET website.

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Submissions

Inquiries about the Society may be sent to:

Professor Hoyt N. Duggan
Department of English
University of Virginia
Charlottesville, VA 22903
hnd@virginia.edu

For more information, visit the SEENET website.


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