@article {odonnell_back_2009,
	title = {Back to the future: what digital editors can learn from print editorial practice},
	journal = {Literary and Linguistic Computing},
	volume = {24},
	number = {1},
	year = {2009},
	note = {00005},
	pages = {113{\textendash}125},
	abstract = {In this article, Daniel O{\textquoteright}Donnell examines the questions of theory, practice, and form when it comes to creating a digital edition. O{\textquoteright}Donnell begins by acknowledging the various departures from the "normal" edition that are made possible in the digital medium: interactivity with uses, multiple displays, virtual realities, and decentred texts. However, O{\textquoteright}Donnell argues that, despite the assumed divide, the print edition may inform and shape the trajectory of the digital in more ways than are anticipated. O{\textquoteright}Donnell draws on the Old English text Caedmon{\textquoteright}s Hymn as a case study to show that the future of the digital lies in the print practices of the past. },
	issn = {0268-1145, 1477-4615},
	doi = {10.1093/llc/fqn039},
	url = {http://llc.oxfordjournals.org/content/24/1/113},
	author = {O{\textquoteright}Donnell, Daniel Paul}
}
