This book addresses the gap between print and digital scholarly
approaches by combining both praxis and theory in a case study of a new
international collaborative digital project, the Modernist Archives
Publishing Project (MAPP). MAPP is an international collaborative
digital project, funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research
Council of Canada, that uses digital tools to showcase archival traces
of twentieth-century publishing. The twenty-first century has witnessed,
and is living through, some of the most dynamic changes ever experienced
in the publishing industry, arguably altering our very understanding of
what it means to read a book. This book brings to both general readers
and scholarly researchers a new way of accessing, and thereby assessing,
the historical meanings of change within the twentieth-century
publication industry by building a resource which organises, interacts
with, and uses historical information about book culture to narrate the
continuities and discontinuities in reading and publishing over the last
century.