Archaeology of a digitization
Bonnie Mak
Graduate School of Library & Information Science, Program in Medieval Studies, University of Illinois, 501 East Daniel Street, Champaign, Illinois, 61820
Search for more papers by this authorBonnie Mak
Graduate School of Library & Information Science, Program in Medieval Studies, University of Illinois, 501 East Daniel Street, Champaign, Illinois, 61820
Search for more papers by this authorAbstract
This study proposes an archaeology as a means of exploring the practices by which digitally encoded resources are generated, circulated, and received. The discussion grapples with the ambiguous relationship between digitizations and their exemplars in the well-known database, Early English Books Online (EEBO), and suggests ways in which digitizations might be analyzed as witnesses of current perceptions about the past and used accordingly in scholarly research. The article therefore offers a critical reading of EEBO and its digitizations as part of a broader effort to investigate the role of digitally encoded resources in the transmission of ideas and the production of cultural heritage.
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