The Future of Digital Editing and Publishing | Conference Proceedings

The Future of Digital Editing and Publishing

Conference Proceedings

Edited by James O’Sullivan and Michael Pidd

2025

Cite the Book
O'Sullivan, J., & Pidd, M. (Eds.). (2025). The Future of Digital Editing and Publishing: Conference Proceedings. Sheffield: The Digital Humanities Institute. Available online at: <https://www.dhi.ac.uk/books/digital-editing-and-publishing>
Table of Contents

James Cummings Creation of Digital Scholarly Editions as Pedagogical Capstones: Reflections on an Undergraduate Dissertations Module

Jana Klinger and Patrick Sahle Find – Map – Research: A Catalogue of Digital Scholarly Editions

Ondine E. Le Blanc In Which the Author Discusses the Digital Documentary Editions Mission of the Primary Source Cooperative, With a Screed on the Economics of Academic Publishing

Qianqi Huang, Vanessa Klomfaß, Julia Nantke, Frank Steinicke Multimodal Modelling of Born-Digital Artifacts: The Digital Estate of Walter Kempowski

Nicholas Cronk and Gillian Pink Oxford University Voltaire (OV): Reimagining the Single-Author Online Resource

Athena Bozika The Perspective of Smallness in the Global Landscape of Digital Scholarly Publishing: The Case of the RCH Digital Library

Roberto Rosselli Del Turco The Quest for the “Hundred Year” Digital Scholarly Edition

About the Publication

The C21 Editions project invited scholars, editors, publishers, technologists, librarians, and other stakeholders to contribute to the International Symposium on the Future of Digital Editing & Publishing, a conference dedicated to shaping the future of digital scholarly editing and publishing. The conference was held at University College Cork, Ireland on 6-7 June 2024.

There were 17 presentations, including a keynote delivered by Professor Gabriel Egan of De Montfort University.

Conference presentations  were given on topics that included: digital pedagogy and the incorporation of scholarly editions in academic curricula; the evolution and future trajectories of digital scholarly editing and publishing; digital textual scholarship and innovative approaches to editing and publishing; the role of artificial intelligence in the editing and publishing process; the implications of born-digital cultural materials for digital scholarly editing and publishing; and open access, copyright, sustainability, and the economics of digital publishing.

Special thanks to Lorraine Zhou for managing the publication of the Proceedings.

C21 Editions is an international collaboration between University College Cork, the Digital Humanities Institute at the University of Sheffield, and the University of Glasgow. The project seeks to explore and make a direct contribution to the future of digital scholarly editing and digital publishing. C21 Editions and the International Symposium on the Future of Digital Editing & Publishing are funded by UKRI-AHRC and the Irish Research Council under the UK-Ireland Collaboration in the Digital Humanities Research Grants, grant numbers AH/W001489/1 and IRC/W001489/1.

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