Mark Vareschi is an associate professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the author of Everywhere and Nowhere: Anonymity and Mediation in Eighteenth-Century Britain. Heather Wacha is a former University of Wisconsin fellow and CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow and associate coordinator of the Center for the History of Print and Digital Culture at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is the coauthor of The Cartulary of the Abbey of PrEmontrE: A Dual Print and Digital Edition.
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Description
List of Illustrations Foreword: Intermediate Horizons by Matthew Kirschenbaum Introduction by Mark Vareschi and Heather Wacha Section I. Approach 1 Benjamin Franklin's Postal Work by Christy L. Pottroff 2 Linking Book History and the Digital Humanities via Museum Studies by Jayme Yahr Section II. Access 3 Material and Digital Traces in Patterns of Nature: Early Modern Botany Books and Seventeenth-Century Needlework by Mary Learner 4 Opening the Book: The Utopian Dreams and Uncertain Future of Open Access Textbook Publishing by Joseph L. Locke and Ben Wright 5 Books of Ours: What Libraries Can Learn About Social Media from Books of Hours by Alexandra Alvis Section III. Assessment 6 Whose Books Are Online? Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Online Text Collections by Catherine A. Winters and Clayton P. Michaud 7 Electronic Versioning and Digital Editions by Paul A. Broyles 8 Materialisms and the Cultural Turn in Digital Humanities by Mattie Burkert Contributors Index

