@article {felluga_addressed_2006,
	title = {Addressed to the Nines: The Victorian Archive and the Disappearance of the Book},
	journal = {Victorian Studies},
	volume = {48},
	number = {2},
	year = {2006},
	note = {00008 {\textless}p{\textgreater}Volume 48, Number 2, Winter 2006{\textless}/p{\textgreater}},
	pages = {305{\textendash}319},
	abstract = {In this essay, Dino Franco Felluga discusses the rise of digital projects and their relationship to traditional print scholarship. Felluga argues that the fear of the books disappearing is unfounded. Just as the oratory progressed after the advent of literacy, so too, Felluga argues, will print continue to exist in tandem with the digital. Instead of understanding print as a fading technology, Felluga encourages scholars to conceptualize print as a skeuomorph. Skeuomorphs, Felluga argues, tends to "put brakes on the speed of new technology{\textquoteright}s adoption by and effect on users, an issue that often manifests itself at the level of the interface." Felluga offers that projects such as NINES will "offer one vision of how technology can redefine not only the way we do scholarship but also the way we understand the aesthetic, epistemological, institutional, and ideological object that is the book." This type of aggregate project, Felluga asserts, will demonstrate how the digital can move beyond the nostalgic and skeuomorphic qualities of the physical book. },
	issn = {1527-2052},
	doi = {10.1353/vic.2006.0078},
	url = {http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/victorian_studies/v048/48.2felluga.html},
	author = {Felluga, Dino Franco}
}
