@article {pierazzo_rationale_2011,
	title = {A rationale of digital documentary editions},
	journal = {Literary and Linguistic Computing},
	year = {2011},
	note = {00022},
	month = {July},
	abstract = {In this article, Elena Pierazzo argues for and illustrates the differences between print and digital editions. Pierazzo uses the Jane Austen{\textquoteright}s Fiction Manuscripts website as a case study. Pierazzo asserts that all editions - including digital editions - present selections of facts through an interpretive lens. However, whereas with print editions the medium of publication inhibited the types of selections scholars could make, the digital medium is face with the opposite issue - where to stop. Pierazzo suggest that editors consider the purpose of the edition, the intended audience of the edition, and the nature of the document they are working with when making their selections. Pierazzo concludes with a discussion on the purpose of including a facsimile alongside a diplomatic transcription edition. },
	issn = {0268-1145, 1477-4615},
	doi = {10.1093/llc/fqr033},
	url = {http://llc.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2011/07/28/llc.fqr033},
	author = {Pierazzo, Elena}
}
