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Project Details

Project name: William Godwin's Diary

Principal Investigator/ Director: Mark Philp

Oxford participants: • Kathryn R. Barush   • James Cummings   • James M Grande   • David O'Shaughnessy   • Mark Philp  (Main Contact)   

Other participants:

Project web page: http://godwindiary.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/

Division: Social Sciences Unit: Politics & Int Relations Sub-unit:
     
Start date: End date:  

Partner organizations (inside or outside Oxford): Victoria Myers (Pepperdine University).

Funder: Leverhulme Trust

Subject Area: History

Project description: William Godwin’s diary is the centrepiece of the Abinger Collection, Bodleian Library and is its most frequently consulted source. Godwin kept his diary assiduously from 1788 until his death in 1836. The diary is a resource of immense importance to researchers of history, politics, literature, and women’s studies. In its pages, one can decipher a remarkably detailed map of radical intellectual and political life in the turbulent period of the 1790s, as well as reconstruct publishing relations, conversational coteries, and theatrical production in the first third of the nineteenth century. One can also trace the developing relationships of possibly the most important family in British literature, Godwin’s own, and its links with his own intellectual and political development. Many of the most important figures in British cultural history feature in its pages including Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Mary Wollstonecraft, William Hazlitt, Elizabeth Inchbald, Charles Lamb, Mary Robinson, and Thomas Holcroft, amongst many others. The key objectives of the project are: to undertake systematic research on the diary to identify those referred to in it and through this to construct a picture of London’s literary and extra-parliamentary political life between 1788 and 1836; to develop a full scholarly apparatus of indexing, annotation, and cross-reference to enhance the intelligibility of the material and allow its systematic searching; to augment the resource further by linking it directly to related electronic material; and, to provide a reliable, searchable, online transcription of the text, alongside a scanned version of the original manuscript.

Methods Used (Click on methods categories for explanations, or go to the ICT Methods tab; NB: not all users have registered categories, sub-headings or details.):

CategorySub-HeadingsDetails
Collaboration  
Collaborative interactionGraphical interaction (asynchronous)
- -Graphical interaction (synchronous)
Data analysisSearching/LinkingSearching and querying
Data CaptureImage capture2d Scanning and photography
Textual InputManual input and transcription
Data structuring and enhancementClassifying and linkingCataloguing and indexing
Text EncodingText encoding - referential

Other projects the participants have been involved in:

Last updated: 24/02/2012 15:16:06

Updated by: Erin Snyder