@inbook {mcinnis_webs_2014,
	title = {Webs of Engagement},
	booktitle = {Shakespeare and the Digital World: Redefining Scholarship and Practice},
	year = {2014},
	note = {00000},
	pages = {43{\textendash}55},
	publisher = {Cambridge {UP}},
	organization = {Cambridge {UP}},
	address = {Cambridge, England},
	abstract = {David McInnis begins this chapter with a question: "why go digital?" McInnis argues that while the digital does offer a myriad of benefits - including increased access and enhanced layouts of materials - simply being digital is not enough for a project to be defined as value added. McInnis makes clear that the decision to create a digital resource over a print resource should be a choice of calculated and critical thinking. McInnis traces his experience developing the Lost Plays Database as a case study. McInnis addresses issues of access, subscription, copyright, and user engagement, contribution, and collaboration. He argues that this type of communal engagement desires more exploration and research. },
	keywords = {1500-1699, and poetry, drama, English literature, in scholarship, role of Internet},
	isbn = {9781107064362 (hbk.)},
	author = {McInnis, David},
	editor = {Carson, Christie and Kirwan, Peter}
}
