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SHAKSPER 1996: The Shakespeare Databank
From: Hardy M. Cook (hmcook@boe00.minc.umd.edu) Date: 11/26/96
Shakespeare Electronic Conference, SHK 7.0886. Tuesday, 26 November 1996. From: Louis Marder <76411.3613@CompuServe.COM> Date: Monday, 25 Nov 96 14:06:36 EST Subject: The Shakespeare Databank TO SHAKESPEARE SCHOLARS, TEACHERS, STUDENTS, AND BARDOLOGISTS I am, and have been, compiling, digesting, and condensing for on-line world-wide computer retrieval, a universal treasury of facts, opinions, and critical commentary of every kind and "ism", It will consist of analytical plot susmmaries, character analyses, themes of the plays and poems, variorum annotations, pictorial illustrations, sources of the plays, annotated topical bibliographies, book and theater reviews, specialized vocabularies and glossaries, language, verse, imagery, proper names, place names, facts about the first editions and editors, theater, acting, staging history, computerized information and data processing, relations with other data bases, self study and teaching materials, historical data, political and religious history, cultural data of every kind, Shakespeare's biography, reputation, topical knowledge (law, medicine, music, etc.), contempories, calendar of dates, Shakespeare in the arts and popular culture, theories of disputed authorship, 1000's of questions and answers, and all kinds of miscellaneous information and interesting triva on every related subject totalling in all about ninety categories. Everything will be entered in single listed sentences (or quoted paragraphs where necessary) for simplicity and ease of comprehension. Wherever possible or necessary, bibliogrphical data, bibliographies, and numerous cross-references will be listed for each item or group, and further reference in the original sources and for extended reading. It will be open ended so that new or newly compiled material can be entered almost daily. Shakespeare dictionaries, thesauri, encyclopedia, manuals, handbooks, outline books, study guides, as well as scholarly books, periodicals, master's essays, dissertations, computerized materials, lectures, and privately submitted materials, will be ransacked for what they have to offer. If your book or article has been published with limited circulation, or your work has not been published at all, here is your opportunity to give your research and scholarship immediate and on-line circulation world-wide If you have ever appeared in print, you will want to be represented, preferably compiled and digested by yourself for utmost accuracy, fidelity, and authority If you want to assume or edit a large topic and enlist your own Associates, that would be very helpful If your are a Professor who teaches Shakespeare and English Renaissance literature who requires a research paper to complete the course, you may assign one or all of your students to work under your supervision and/or yours and mine if they write to me with your approval. If you are a professor, scholar, teacher, student, or Shakespeare enthusiast who would like to develop one of the many topics, your help would be much appreciated, and your by-line as an Associate of the SDB in the SDB would give you departmental recognition, worthy satisfaction, and permanent distinction for helping everyone to a greater understanding and appreciation of Shakespeare. If you are interested in any aspect of this project, please write to Louis Marder, 1217 Ashland Avenue, Evanston, Illinois 60202-1103 or use E-mail 76411.3613@Compuserve.com Louis Marder PS: I would also like to hear from all those who enlisted as Associates over the years and with whom I lost contact.
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