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Woolf Online
is currently a digital archive of Virginia Woolf's To the Lighthouse (1927). The site is intended to serve as a resource for research and study of Woolf's modernist classic. It includes images and transcriptions of the drafts, typescripts, proofs, and early editions of the novel, as well as a wealth of contextual materials. VISIT SITE
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Samuel Beckett Digital Manuscript Project
reunites the manuscripts of Samuel Beckett's works in a digital way and facilitates genetic research: the project brings together digital facsimiles of documents that are now preserved in different holding libraries, and adds transcriptions of Beckett's manuscripts, tools for bilingual and genetic version comparison, a search engine, and an analysis of the textual genesis of his works. VISIT SITE
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Making Modernism
is an exhibit featuring previously unpublished archival documents from the Newberry Library.
The focus of Making Modernism is the literature of Chicago in connection with the unique urban, economic, and cultural history of the city. VISIT SITE
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Modernist Journals Project: New Age
is a digital edition within the Modernist Journals Project, a major resource for the study of modernism in the English-speaking world, with periodical literature as its central concern. The project's primary mission is to produce digital editions of culturally significant magazines from around the early 20th century. VISIT SITE
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Note Books of a Woman Alone
is the personal record of an unmarried woman who earned her living first as a governess, then as a clerk in a London employment agency from about 1913 to 1934. This edition makes available the rare and little known text, and includes annotations, page images, contemporary reviews, and the original editor’s letters to Virginia Woolf, whose feminism inspired her work. VISIT SITE
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Blue Mountain Project: Der Sturm
is a digital edition within the Blue Mountain Project. Drawing on Princeton University’s exceptional collections and curatorial and academic expertise, the Blue Mountain Project is a digital thematic research collection of art, music and literary periodicals published between 1848, the year of the European Revolutions, and 1923 – a functional boundary for works presumed to be in the public domain. VISIT SITE
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