Recent
and Forthcoming Presentations
Articles, Talks, and Sections from Books
- Blansfield, Karen. C. "Tyger, Tyger, Byte by Byte." OIT
Review 3.2 (spring/summer 1995): 12-14. Magazine
published by the Office of Information Technology, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.
- Bryan, Julia. "Blake
Unbound." Endeavors (fall 1997). Alumni
magazine published by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
- Chossegros, Aurélia. "Le Site à la
loupe: The William Blake Archive." L'Observatoire Critique.
17 Jan. 2007. Abstract
(in English); article
(in French).
- Cooper, Andrew, and Michael Simpson. "The High-Tech Luddite
of Lambeth: Blake's Eternal Hacking." Wordsworth Circle
30.3 (summer 1999): 125-31. [See also Eaves, Morris, Robert N.
Essick, Joseph Viscomi, and Matthew Kirschenbaum; Johnson, Mary Lynn;
and Kroeber, Karl.]
- Cooper, Andrew, and Michael Simpson. "Looks Good in
Practice, But Does It Work in Theory? Rebooting the Blake Archive." Wordsworth
Circle 31.1 (winter 2000): 63-68.
- Dane, Joseph A. Out of Sorts: On Typography and Print Culture. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 2011. [Dane discusses the Blake Archive on pages
136-40.]
- Dent, Shirley. "Bruised without Mercy." Rev. of The Complete Poetry and Prose of
William Blake, ed. David V. Erdman, and Songs of Innocence and
Experience [sic], by William Blake, ed. Robert N. Essick.
Times Literary
Supplement. 15 May 2009: 22.
- Eaves, Morris, Robert N. Essick, and Joseph Viscomi. "The
William Blake Archive: The Medium When the Millenium Is the
Message." Romanticism and Millenarianism.
Ed. Tim Fulford.
New York: Palgrave, 2002. 219-33.
- Eaves, Morris, Robert N. Essick, and Joseph Viscomi. See
also Kraus, Kari.
- Eaves, Morris, Robert N. Essick, Joseph Viscomi, and
Matthew Kirschenbaum. "Standards, Methods, and Objectives in the
William Blake Archive." Wordsworth Circle 30.3
(summer 1999): 135-44. [See also Cooper, Andrew, and Michael
Simpson, "The High-Tech Luddite of Lambeth: Blake's Eternal
Hacking"; Johnson, Mary Lynn; and Kroeber, Karl.]
- Editors and Staff of the William Blake Archive. "The
Persistence of Vision: Images and Imaging at the William Blake Archive."
RLG DigiNews 4.1 (Feb. 2000).
- Esterhammer, Angela. "Blake and Language." Palgrave Advances in William
Blake Studies. Ed. Nicholas M. Williams. New York:
Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. 63-84. [Esterhammer discusses the Blake
Archive on page 82. See also Hilton, Nelson, "Blake and the
Play of 'Textuality'"; and Jones, John H.]
- Gitelman, Lisa. "New Media </Body>." Always Already New: Media,
History, and the Data of Culture. Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 2006. 123-50. [Gitelman discusses the Blake Archive on pages
139-44.]
- Hayles, N. Katherine. "Romantic Bits: Embedded in Media."
Plenary address at the eighth annual conference of the North American
Society for the Study of Romanticism, Tempe, AZ, Sept. 14-17,
2000.
- Hayles, N. Katherine. "Translating Media." My Mother Was a Computer: Digital Subjects and Literary
Texts. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2005.
89-116. Excerpt.
- Hayles, N. Katherine. "Translating Media: Why We Should
Rethink Textuality." Yale
Journal of Criticism: Interpretation in the Humanities
16.2 (2003): 263-90.
- Hilton, Nelson. "Blake and the Play of
'Textuality.'" Palgrave
Advances in William Blake Studies. Ed. Nicholas M.
Williams. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. 85-105. [Hilton discusses
the Blake Archive on pages 87, 95, and 102. See also Esterhammer,
Angela; and Jones, John H.]
- Jackson, Marni. "O Rose Thou Art Chic: A William Blake Web
Site Prompts Thoughts about the Relationship between Words and
Pictures." Toronto Globe and Mail. 10 Feb. 2001:
D18.
- Johnson, Mary Lynn. "Contingencies, Exigencies, and Editorial Praxis: The Case of the 2008 Norton Blake." Editing and Reading Blake. Ed. Wayne C. Ripley and Justin Van Kleeck. Sept. 2010. Romantic Circles. [See also Lee, Rachel, and J. Alexandra McGhee; Ripley, Wayne C., "Delineation Editing of Co-Texts: William Blake’s Illustrations," and "Introduction: Editing Blake"; and Van Kleeck, Justin.]
- Johnson, Mary Lynn. "The Iowa Blake Videodisc Project: A
Cautionary History." Wordsworth Circle 30.3 (summer
1999): 131-35. [See also Cooper, Andrew, and Michael
Simpson, "The High-Tech Luddite of Lambeth: Blake's Eternal
Hacking"; Eaves, Morris, Robert N. Essick, Joseph Viscomi, and
Matthew Kirschenbaum; and Kroeber, Karl.]
- Jones, John H. "Blake's Production Methods." Palgrave Advances in William
Blake Studies.
Ed. Nicholas M. Williams. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. 25-41.
[Jones discusses the Blake Archive on pages 38-39. See also
Esterhammer, Angela; and Hilton, Nelson, "Blake and the Play of
'Textuality'."]
- Jones, Stephen E. "The William Blake Archive: An
Overview." Literature Compass 3.3 (Apr. 2006):
409-16. Abstract.
- Kirschenbaum, Matthew. "Documenting Digital Images: Textual
Meta-data at the Blake Archive." The Electronic Library
16.4 (Aug. 1998): 239-41. [See also a notice
of this item in the Sept. 1998 issue of Current
Cites.]
- Kirschenbaum, Matthew. "Remediating Blake." ArtByte:
The Magazine of Digital Culture 2.2 (summer 1999):
100-a1.
- Kraus, Kari. "'Once Only Imagined': An Interview with
Morris Eaves, Robert N. Essick, and Joseph Viscomi on the Past,
Present, and Future of Blake Studies." Studies in
Romanticism 41 (summer 2002): 143-99. Kraus's interview has
been published online by Romantic
Circles.
- Kroeber, Karl. "The Blake Archive and the Future of
Literary Studies." Wordsworth Circle 30.3 (summer
1999): 123-25. [See also Cooper, Andrew, and Michael
Simpson, "The High-Tech Luddite of Lambeth: Blake's Eternal
Hacking"; Eaves, Morris, Robert N. Essick, Joseph Viscomi, and
Matthew Kirschenbaum; and Johnson, Mary Lynn.]
- Lee, Rachel, and J. Alexandra McGhee. "'The productions of time': Visions of Blake in the Digital Age.'" Editing and Reading Blake. Ed. Wayne C. Ripley and Justin Van Kleeck. Sept. 2010. Romantic Circles. [See also Johnson, Mary Lynn, "Contingencies, Exigencies, and Editorial Praxis: The Case of the 2008 Norton Blake"; Ripley, Wayne C., "Delineation Editing of Co-Texts: William Blake’s Illustrations," and "Introduction: Editing Blake"; and Van Kleeck, Justin.]
- McGarvey, Kathleen. "Burning
Bright." Rochester
Review 70.4 (Mar./Apr. 2008): 30-35.
- Miall, David S. "Romanticism in the Electronic Age." Romanticism:
An Oxford Guide. Ed. Nicholas Roe. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2005.
708-20. [Miall discusses the Blake Archive on pages
713-15.]
- Miller, J. Hillis. "Digital Blake." The
Seeming and the Seen: Essays in
Modern Visual and Literary Culture.
Ed. Beverly Maeder, Jürg Schwyter, Ilona Sigrist, and Boris
Vejdovsky. Translantic Aesthetics and Culture. Vol. 1. Bern,
Switzerland: Peter Lang, 2006. 29-49.
- Murphy, J. Stephen. "The Death of the Editor." Essays in Criticism
58.4 (Oct. 2008): 289-310. [Murphy discusses the Blake Archive on pages
301-03.]
- Pitti, Daniel, and John Unsworth. "After
the Fall: Structured Data at IATH." Paper from the annual
joint meeting of the Association for Computers and the Humanities and
the Association for Literary and Linguistic
Computing, Debrecen, Hungary, July 1998.
- Ripley, Wayne C. "Delineation Editing of Co-Texts: William Blake’s Illustrations." Editing and Reading Blake. Ed. Wayne C. Ripley and Justin Van Kleeck. Sept. 2010. Romantic Circles. [See also Johnson, Mary Lynn, "Contingencies, Exigencies, and Editorial Praxis: The Case of the 2008 Norton Blake"; Lee, Rachel, and J. Alexandra McGhee; Ripley, Wayne C., "Introduction: Editing Blake"; and Van Kleeck, Justin.]
- Ripley, Wayne C. "Introduction: Editing Blake." Editing and Reading Blake. Ed. Wayne C. Ripley and Justin Van Kleeck. Sept. 2010. Romantic Circles. [See also Johnson, Mary Lynn, "Contingencies, Exigencies, and Editorial Praxis: The Case of the 2008 Norton Blake"; Lee, Rachel, and J. Alexandra McGhee; Ripley, Wayne C., "Delineation Editing of Co-Texts: William Blake’s Illustrations"; and Van Kleeck, Justin.]
- Saklofske, Jon. "NewRadial: Revisualizing the Blake Archive." Visualizing the Archive, spec. issue of Poetess Archive Journal 2.1 (2010).
- Thomas, Julia. "Getting the Picture: Word and Image in the
Digital Archive." European
Journal of English Studies 11.2 (2007): 193-206. [Thomas
discusses the Blake Archive on pages 197-200.]
- Van Kleeck, Justin. "Editioning William Blake’s VALA/The Four Zoas." Editing and Reading Blake. Ed. Wayne C. Ripley and Justin Van Kleeck. Sept. 2010. Romantic Circles. [See also Johnson, Mary Lynn, "Contingencies, Exigencies, and Editorial Praxis: The Case of the 2008 Norton Blake"; Lee, Rachel, and J. Alexandra McGhee; and Ripley, Wayne C., "Delineation Editing of Co-Texts: William Blake’s Illustrations," and "Introduction: Editing Blake."]
- Viscomi, Joseph. "Digital Facsimiles: Reading the William
Blake Archive." Computers and the Humanities 36.1
(2002): 27-48.
- Walsh, John A. "Multimedia and Multitasking: A Survey of
Digital Resources for Nineteenth-Century Literary Studies." A Companion to Digital Literary
Studies.
Ed. Susan Schreibman and Ray Siemens. Oxford: Blackwell,
2008. [See also Clement, Tanya, and Gretchen
Gueguen; Damian-Grint, Peter; and Price, Kenneth M.]
Reviews
- Curran, Stuart. "The William Blake Archive." TEXT
12 (1999): 216-19.
- Hamel-Schwulst, M. "The
William Blake Archive." Choice, Current [WEB]
Reviews for Academic Libraries 35, Supplement (1998): 72.
- MERLOT English Editorial Board. "The William Blake Archive." MERLOT (Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching), 25 Nov. 2010.
- Peterfreund, Stuart. "The William Blake Archive." European
Romantic Review 13 (2002): 472-76.
Comments on the Archive
- Damian-Grint, Peter. "Eighteenth-Century Literature in
English and Other Languages: Image, Text, and Hypertext." A Companion to Digital Literary
Studies. Ed. Susan Schreibman and Ray Siemens.
Oxford: Blackwell, 2008. [Damian-Grint
discusses the Blake Archive in the section on "Research sites." See
also Clement, Tanya, and Gretchen Gueguen; Price, Kenneth M;
and Walsh, John A.]
- Effinger, Elizabeth C. "Anal Blake: Bringing up the Rear in Blakean Criticism." Queer Blake.
Ed. Helen P. Bruder and Tristanne Connolly. New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2010. 63-73. [Effinger discusses the Blake Archive on pages
64-65].
- Hayles, N. Katherine. "Entering the Electronic
Environment." Writing
Machines. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2002. 34-45. [Hayles
discusses the Blake Archive on pages 42-45.]
- Price, Kenneth M. "Electronic Scholarly Editions." A Companion to Digital Literary
Studies.
Ed. Susan Schreibman and Ray Siemens. Oxford: Blackwell,
2008. [Price discusses the Blake Archive in the
introduction. See also Clement, Tanya, and Gretchen
Gueguen; Damian-Grint,
Peter; and Walsh, John A.]
Miscellanea
- Clement, Tanya, and Gretchen Gueguen. "Annotated Overview
of Selected Electronic Resources." A Companion to Digital Literary
Studies.
Ed. Susan Schreibman and Ray Siemens. Oxford: Blackwell, 2008. [See also Damian-Grint, Peter; Price, Kenneth M; and
Walsh, John A.]
- Gilster, Paul A. "A Click Away from History." Carolina
Alumni Review. Jan./Feb. 1999: 40-41.
- Johnson, Mary Lynn, and John E. Grant, ed. Blake's Poetry and Designs:
Illuminated Works/Other Writings/Criticism. 2nd ed. New
York: Norton, 2008. [This
Norton Critical Edition makes use of the Blake Archive's transcriptions
of the illuminated works and reproduces images provided by the Archive.
The editors note that it is "designed to be used in tandem with the
magnificent William Blake Archive ... and other online resources"
(xi).]
- Jones, Lois Swan. Art Information and the
Internet: How to Find It, How to Use It. Phoenix: Oryx Press,
1999. 50.
- Lourenço, Isabel Maria Graça. The William Blake Archive: Da gravura iluminada à edição electrónica. Diss. U of Coimbra, 2009. [in Portuguese]
- Misic, Vladimir. Mixed Raster Content for Processing of
Colored Engravings. Diss. U of Rochester, 2003.
- MLA Handbook
for Writers of Research Papers. 7th ed. New York: MLA,
2009. [This edition of the MLA handbook uses the Blake Archive as an
example of how to cite a Web publication and includes a screenshot of
the Archive. See pages 182-83.]
- Pfau, Thomas. Romantic Moods: Paranoia, Trauma, and Melancholy, 1790-1840. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2005. [Pfau ties his discussion of The [First] Book of Urizen to the Blake Archive's electronic edition of copy G.]
Works No Longer Available
- Guernsey, Lisa. "Searchable Archive Zooms in on William
Blake's Illuminated Books." The Chronicle of Higher Education.
Information Technology. 17 Sept. 1997. [This online article predates The Chronicle of
Higher Education's daily news archives.]
- Hodgson, Elinor. "Feat in Modern Times." World
Book Dealers. 4 Apr. 2001
<http://www.worldbookdealers.com>. [The Web site no
longer exists.]
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