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Tracking pirates through the digital archive

Tracking pirates through the digital archive
Tracking pirates through the digital archive
The proliferation of digitized nineteenth-century newspapers over the last decade or so has understandably been greeted with enthusiasm by many Humanities scholars. At their best these digital resources offer deep levels of searchability and the potential for comparing cultural trends across and between different global cultures. With their help, we might eventually come to understand both synchronic and diachronic nineteenth-century language systems more fully than ever before, able in effect to eavesdrop on the dialogic interactions of a lost world by extracting and analysing slices of its daily life, or comparing its shifting concerns over time and space. For Book Historians, however, these resources raise some methodological problems that suggest we would be wise not to jettison the print archive entirely. Using a keyword search for Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations as a case study, this article aims to explore some of the pleasures and pitfalls of using digitized Anglophone newspapers for book historical research.
0306-2473
178-195
Hammond, Mary
36bc55ac-8543-411f-ba89-668e19905e35
Hammond, Mary
36bc55ac-8543-411f-ba89-668e19905e35

Hammond, Mary (2015) Tracking pirates through the digital archive. [in special issue: The History of the Book] The Yearbook of English Studies, 45, 178-195. (doi:10.5699/yearenglstud.45.2015.0178).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The proliferation of digitized nineteenth-century newspapers over the last decade or so has understandably been greeted with enthusiasm by many Humanities scholars. At their best these digital resources offer deep levels of searchability and the potential for comparing cultural trends across and between different global cultures. With their help, we might eventually come to understand both synchronic and diachronic nineteenth-century language systems more fully than ever before, able in effect to eavesdrop on the dialogic interactions of a lost world by extracting and analysing slices of its daily life, or comparing its shifting concerns over time and space. For Book Historians, however, these resources raise some methodological problems that suggest we would be wise not to jettison the print archive entirely. Using a keyword search for Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations as a case study, this article aims to explore some of the pleasures and pitfalls of using digitized Anglophone newspapers for book historical research.

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Published date: August 2015
Organisations: English

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Local EPrints ID: 359331
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/359331
ISSN: 0306-2473
PURE UUID: 6c3a95b6-0d70-4461-8a2e-1b58836c8975

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Date deposited: 29 Sep 2015 09:00
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:02

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