@article {price_edition_2009,
	title = {Edition, Project, Database, Archive, Thematic Research Collection: What{\textquoteright}s in a Name?},
	volume = {3},
	number = {3},
	year = {2009},
	note = {00024},
	abstract = {Price explores how "current terms describing digital scholarship both clarify and obscure our collective enterprise." He takes up five terms - edition, project, database, archive, and thematic research collective - and uses the Walt Whitman Archive as a case study to examine those categories. In many ways, Price argues that the terms of digital textual studies are inadequate. Price the relationship between print and digital editions, the transient notions of a "project," and the movement from archival materials to digital surrogates. Price argues that the term digital thematic research collection may well be a more accurate way to describe the work - like the Walt Whitman Archive - undertaken by digital humanities scholars. Price champions a shift in emphasis from the created object to the group of people creating together.},
	url = {http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/vol/3/3/000053/000053.html$\#$},
	author = {Price, Kenneth M.}
}
