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==AustLit and Research==
==AustLit and Research==
AustLit publishes biographical entries and brief essays on Australian writers, critics and storytellers, organisational histories relating to publishers, theatre companies and other arts organisations, and complete bibliographical histories of works of fiction and criticism. It also had an active digitisation program to generate full text versions of out-of-print literary works and critical articles about Australian literature.
AustLit publishes biographical entries and brief essays on Australian writers, critics and storytellers, organisational histories relating to publishers, theatre companies and other arts organisations, and complete bibliographical histories of works of fiction and criticism. It also has an active digitisation program to generate full text versions of out-of-print literary works and critical articles about Australian literature.


AustLit Research Communities [http://www.austlit.edu.au/specialistDatasets] support detailed explorations of particular aspects of Australia's literary culture. Researchers can work within AustLit to create datasets around a specific field. These projects range across book, magazine and publishing histories, subject specific surveys of regionally-based publishing and thematically-based subsets. Research into the history of Australian popular and pulp fiction is supported alongside research into theatre history, drama and multicultural writers.<ref>Jacklin, Michael. "Multicultural Literature in Australian and the AustLit Database". ''InCite'' Vol. 30., No. 4., April 2009.</ref> BlackWords [http://www.austlit.edu.au/BlackWords] is a landmark AustLit research project that details the lives and work of [[Australian Aboriginal]] and [[Torres Strait Islander]] writers and storytellers.
AustLit Research Communities [http://www.austlit.edu.au/specialistDatasets] support detailed explorations of particular aspects of Australia's literary culture. Researchers can work within AustLit to create datasets around a specific field. These projects range across book, magazine and publishing histories, subject specific surveys of regionally-based publishing and thematically-based subsets. Research into the history of Australian popular and pulp fiction is supported alongside research into theatre history, drama and multicultural writers.<ref>Jacklin, Michael. "Multicultural Literature in Australian and the AustLit Database". ''InCite'' Vol. 30., No. 4., April 2009.</ref> BlackWords [http://www.austlit.edu.au/BlackWords] is a landmark AustLit research project that details the lives and work of [[Australian Aboriginal]] and [[Torres Strait Islander]] writers and storytellers.


AustLit has become a key information resource for the study of Australian literature and related fields. Because of its status as the most comprehensive record of a nation's publishing history, AustLit has become an important source of data for analysing Australian literary history.<ref>Bode, Katherine. "From British Domination to Multinational Conglomeration: A Revised History of Australian Novel publishing, 1950-2007". ''Resourceful Reading: The New Empiricism, eResearch and Australian Literary Culture'', Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2009. pp. 194-222.</ref><ref>Kilner, Kerry. "AustLit: Creating a Collaborative Research Space for Australian Literary Studies". ''Resourceful Reading: The New Empiricism, eResearch and Australian Literary Culture'', Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2009. pp. 299-315.</ref><ref>Ensor, Jason. "Still Waters Run Deep: Empirical Methods and the Migration Patterns of Regional Publishers, Authors and Titles within Australian Literature". ''Antipodes'', December 2009.</ref>
AustLit has become a key information resource for the study of Australian literature and related fields. Because of its status as the most comprehensive record of a nation's publishing history, AustLit has become an important source of data for analysing Australian literary history.<ref>Bode, Katherine. "From British Domination to Multinational Conglomeration: A Revised History of Australian Novel publishing, 1950-2007". ''Resourceful Reading: The New Empiricism, eResearch and Australian Literary Culture'', Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2009. pp. 194-222.</ref><ref>Kilner, Kerry. "AustLit: Creating a Collaborative Research Space for Australian Literary Studies". ''Resourceful Reading: The New Empiricism, eResearch and Australian Literary Culture'', Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2009. pp. 299-315.</ref><ref>Ensor, Jason. "Still Waters Run Deep: Empirical Methods and the Migration Patterns of Regional Publishers, Authors and Titles within Australian Literature". ''Antipodes'', December 2009.</ref> With the rise of Digital Humanities research practice in Australia AustLit demonstrates some of the ways that research can be undertaken with large quantities of rich data.

With the rise of Digital Humanities research practice in Australia AustLit demonstrates some of the ways that research can be undertaken with large quantities of rich data.
== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 23:23, 26 October 2010


AustLit
Country of origin Australien
Headquarters locationBisbane, Queensland
Publication typesAustralian Literature Criticism, Bibliography, Biography
Official websiteOfficial site

AustLit: The Australian Literature Resource

AustLit [1] is an internet-based collaboration between researchers and librarians from Australian universities designed to comprehensively record the history of Australian literary and story making cultures.

History

AustLit was founded 2000 as a resource and research infrastructure for literary studies. It has been funded by participating universities and the Australian Research Council. The University of Queensland leads the consortium. Partner universities include the University of New South Wales, the University of Sydney, Flinders University, the University of Wollongong, James Cook University and the University of Western Australia. Significant levels of research and teaching in the field are undertaken at all partner universities.

AustLit and Research

AustLit publishes biographical entries and brief essays on Australian writers, critics and storytellers, organisational histories relating to publishers, theatre companies and other arts organisations, and complete bibliographical histories of works of fiction and criticism. It also has an active digitisation program to generate full text versions of out-of-print literary works and critical articles about Australian literature.

AustLit Research Communities [2] support detailed explorations of particular aspects of Australia's literary culture. Researchers can work within AustLit to create datasets around a specific field. These projects range across book, magazine and publishing histories, subject specific surveys of regionally-based publishing and thematically-based subsets. Research into the history of Australian popular and pulp fiction is supported alongside research into theatre history, drama and multicultural writers.[1] BlackWords [3] is a landmark AustLit research project that details the lives and work of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander writers and storytellers.

AustLit has become a key information resource for the study of Australian literature and related fields. Because of its status as the most comprehensive record of a nation's publishing history, AustLit has become an important source of data for analysing Australian literary history.[2][3][4] With the rise of Digital Humanities research practice in Australia AustLit demonstrates some of the ways that research can be undertaken with large quantities of rich data.

References

  1. ^ Jacklin, Michael. "Multicultural Literature in Australian and the AustLit Database". InCite Vol. 30., No. 4., April 2009.
  2. ^ Bode, Katherine. "From British Domination to Multinational Conglomeration: A Revised History of Australian Novel publishing, 1950-2007". Resourceful Reading: The New Empiricism, eResearch and Australian Literary Culture, Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2009. pp. 194-222.
  3. ^ Kilner, Kerry. "AustLit: Creating a Collaborative Research Space for Australian Literary Studies". Resourceful Reading: The New Empiricism, eResearch and Australian Literary Culture, Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2009. pp. 299-315.
  4. ^ Ensor, Jason. "Still Waters Run Deep: Empirical Methods and the Migration Patterns of Regional Publishers, Authors and Titles within Australian Literature". Antipodes, December 2009.