@article {ziegler_women_2001,
	title = {Women Writers Online: An Evaluation and Annotated Bibliography of Web Resources},
	journal = {Early Modern Literary Studies: A Journal of Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century English Literature},
	volume = {6},
	number = {3},
	year = {2001},
	note = {00000},
	month = {jan},
	abstract = {Using Paul Delany{\textquoteright}s term docuverse (a large collection of electronically stored and linked documents, connected to a computer network), Ziegler discusses how electronic collections are limitless in their manipulability. Ziegler argues that the web allows people to interact with texts in different ways - through comparison, drawing intertextual connections, or providing different contexts. However, while computers "may allow us to weave a richer and different kind of text than before, but such text-making is at present still very time consuming, requiring hours of searching on the web, where we are often frustrated by not finding exactly what we want." Ziegler highlights issues of upkeep, mobility, and transferability when it comes to electronic texts. To conclude Ziegler emphasizes the importance to remembering the embodied form of a text, even when encountering them online. Following Ziegler{\textquoteright}s article she produces an annotated bibliography of Early Modern writers from the Women Writers Online archive. },
	keywords = {1500-1699, by women writers, checklist, English literature, of website, review article},
	issn = {1201-2459},
	url = {http://extra.shu.ac.uk/emls/06-3/06-3toc.htm},
	author = {Ziegler, Georgianna}
}
