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Early Modern Literary Studies (
http://purl.oclc.org/emls/05-3/05-3toc.htm ) is
pleased to announce the launch of its January issue, a special issue on
Renaissance Literary Studies and Humanities Computing guest-edited by
R.G.
Siemens and David R. Shore.  Articles include 'Iter: Where Does the Path
Lead?'
(William R. Bowen, University of Toronto), 'A Study of Early Music on
CD-ROM'
(Susan Forscher Weiss and Ichiro Fujinaga), 'The Janus-Face of Early
Modern
Literary Studies: Negotiating the Boundaries of Interactivity in an
Electronic
Journal for the Humanities' (Paul Dyck, University of Alberta, R.G.
Siemens,
Malaspina University College, Jennifer Lewin, Yale University, and
Joanne
Woolway Grenfell, Oriel College, Oxford), 'Reinventing Rare Books: The
"Virtual
Furness Shakespeare Library" at the University of Pennsylvania' (Rebecca
Bushness, University of Pennsylvania), 'The Web and the Book: The
Memorial
Electronic Edition of Andrea Alciato's Book of Emblems' (Mark Feltham,
University of Western Ontario, and William Barker, Memorial University),
'"How
shall I measure out thy bloud?", or, "Weening is not measure": TACT,
Herbert,
and Sacramental Devotion in the Electronic Temple' (Robert Whalen,
University
of Toronto), and 'Hell and Hypertext Hath No Limits: Electronic Texts
and the
Crises in Criticism' (Hilary J. Binda, Tufts University).  There is also
the
usual complement of book and theatre reviews.

Lisa Hopkins
Editor, Early Modern Literary Studies