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Background
This centre initiative developed in parallel with the Academy Editions of Australian Literature series, the Centre's main project. Discussions began from 1993 and a team was put together: Paul Eggert (co-ordinator), Phill Berrie (programmer at ADFA), Chris Tiffin (at UQ) and Graham Barwell (at UWoll). It worked on and off over the next 12 years, on and off, as funding was available. At issue in the early discussions was the form or forms an
electronic scholarly edition could feasibly take, using the text files being generated by the Academy Editions project as its archive, and
what resources would be needed to realise the concept. This built on three
years of development of MacCASE, the collation software for comparing versions of works. The initial plans were published in Computers
and Texts (Oxford); No. 8 (December 1994), pp. 5-7. Funded by the AVCC Working Group on Electronic Publishing, a pilot electronic edition of part of Marcus Clarke's His Natural
Life was shown to audiences of scholars in Sydney and Canberra
in 1996. It incorporated for the chosen section several versions of the
novel in text and facsimile, two film versions of the section, a song and
other materials. The scripting was in HTML. Development in SGML-TEI continued. The Centre organised a 5-day workshop, 9-13 December 1996, at ADFA,
on electronic scholarly editing. Dr. Peter Robinson (Oxford) conducted
the workshop. An open seminar on issues of text-encoding formed part of
the week's activities. Another workshop was organised in 1998 for a Dante electronic-commedia project.
In 2000-2001 the project was renamed: AUTHENTICATED ELECTRONIC EDITIONS With our funding an electronic edition of His Natural Life was completed: see In 2004 an ARC special projects grant to the Australian Academy of the Humanities allowed the work to resume. By now the authentification of textual transcriptions using stand-off markup that is inserted Just In Time had been perfected. This project proved that it also facilitates collaborative interpretation of the text but without endangering the authenticity of the textfile itself. The testbed was the bushranger Ned Kelly's famous Jerilderie Letter of 1879. See the electronic edition of it, with two sets of annotation and introductions at www.unsw.adfa.edu.au/JITM New software that allows already marked-up text files to be used under the Just In Time Markup system and to be the subject of further interpretation was also developed. It is called JITAM: Just In Time Authentication Mechanism. Download it at www.unsw.adfa.edu.au/ASEC/JITAM For discussions of what JITM facilitates, see
For other papers on the project click here
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Last Updated : 1 March 2007