Over the course of ncse, members of the team gave a number of papers about the project. Below is a list of the events at which papers were presented, along with links to the papers themselves:

Research Society for Victorian Periodicals

Virginia Commonwealth University, 15 September 2007

Laurel Brake: 'Ephemera? Time-management and serial publication'

British Association for Victorian Studies

University of Salford, 30 August - 1 September 2007

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: 'ncse and the Production of Victorian Text in the Digital Age'. To download the paper click here and the presentation click here.

Laurel Brake: 'Imagining the Press: Occasional Notes'

British Library Early and Printed Collections Seminar

British Library, 28 June 2007

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: 'From Life on the Shelves to Digital Shelf-Life: ncse and Digitizing Periodicals'.To download the paper click here and the presentation click here.

Victorian Studies: Past and Futures

University of Leicester, 31 March 2007

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: Interactive digital workshop '‘Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition’''.To download our discussion paper click here and the presentation click here

Society for Textual Scholarship

[http://www.textual.org/]

New York University, 14-17 March 2007

Laurel Brake, Jim Mussell , Suzanne Paylor, John Stokes and Mark Turner (Panel): 'Editing Journalism: the Past in the Present'.

Laurel Brake: 'Periodical problems: clusters, runs, and editions'.

Suzanne Paylor and Jim Mussell: 'From Life on the Shelves to Digital Shelf-Life: Representing Journalism as an Historical Artefact in the Digital Domain'. To download the paper click here and the presentation click here.

Mark Turner and John Stokes: 'Editing Journalism: The Case of Oscar Wilde'.

ncse Symposium 2007: Digitising Journalism

King's College London, 24th February 2007

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: 'ncse: Where we Are and Where we Are Going'. To download the paper click here and the presentation click here'.

Laurel Brake: 'All Change: ncse in Year 2' , To download the paper click here.

Open University Book History and Bibliography Research Group, Institute of English Studies

[http://www2.sas.ac.uk/ies/index.htm]

Institute of English Studies, University of London, 29 January 2007

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: 'A Picture or a Thousand Words? The use of images in the nineteenth-century periodical press, and how they are reproduced digitally today'. To download the paper click here and the presentation click here.

Open University Book History and Bibliography Research Group, Institute of English Studies

[http://www2.sas.ac.uk/ies/index.htm]

Institute of English Studies, University of London, 23 October 2006

Laurel Brake: 'Town and Country? Bibliography and multiple editions of two 19C newspapers'. To download this paper click here.

Research Society for Victorian Periodicals: Victorian Geographies

[http://www.rs4vp.org/]

City University of New York , 14-15 September 2006

Laurel Brake: 'Multiple Editions and the Public Sphere, 1838-52: the Leader and the Northern Star'

British Association for Victorian Studies

[http://www.bavsuk.org/]

University of Liverpool, 7-9 September 2006

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: 'Conflict and Competition in Nineteenth-Century Advertising'. To download the paper click here and the presentation click here.

Historical Text Mining Workshop

[http://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/events/htm06/]

University of Lancaster, 20-21 July 2006

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: 'Historical Text Mining and ncse'. To download the paper click here and for the presentation click here.

Text Editing, Scholarship, Print, and the Digital World

[http://www.methodsnetwork.ac.uk/redist/pdf/es3_2report.pdf]

Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King’s College London, 29 June 2006

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: 'Editions and archives: textual editing and the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition'. To download the paper click here and the presentation click here.

The Verbal and the Visual in Nineteenth-Century Culture

[http://www.bbk.ac.uk/english/19c/]

Institute of English Studies, London, 23- 24 June 2006

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: (Workshop) 'A Picture or a Thousand Words? The use of images in the nineteenth-century periodical press, and how they are reproduced digitally today'. To download the workshop pack click here and to download the accompanying image pack click here.

ncse Symposium 2006: Going Digital

Birkbeck, University of London, University of London, 25 February 2006

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: 'ncse: Selecting the Core'. To download this paper click here.

Mapping the Magazine

[http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/jomec/]

Cardiff University, 15-16 September 2005

Jim Mussell: '"A Word with our Critics": Doing Media History with Electronic Resources'. To download this paper click here.

British Association for Victorian Studies

[http://www.bavsuk.org]

University of Gloucestershire, 5-7 September 2005

nsce panel: 'Nineteenth-Century Periodicals in the Long View'.

Chair:

  • Isobel Armstrong

Speakers:

  • Laurel Brake, 'Capturing the Leader : from Template to Snapshot'. To download this paper click here.
  • Jim Mussell, 'ncse: Publishing the Nineteenth-Century Periodical Today'. To download this paper click here.
  • Mark Turner, 'Editing Wilde’s Journalism'.

Digital Resources in the Humanities

[http://www.drh.org.uk/]

University of Lancaster, 4-7 September 2005

Suzanne Paylor: 'Ma(r)king the Text? The Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition and the Role of Humanities Scholars in the Digitisation of Print Archives'.

Networked Interface for Nineteenth-Century Electronic Scholarship

[http://www.nines.org/]

University of Virginia, 11-15 July 2005

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: (workshop) 'Materials Analysis and Preliminary Digitization: Best Practices in OCR, Transcription and Imaging'. To download a report of the workshop, click here.

Centre for Nineteenth Century Studies

[http://www.bbk.ac.uk/eh/research/centreforc19thstudies]

Birkbeck, University of London, 6 May 2005

Jim Mussell and Suzanne Paylor: 'Mapping the "Mighty Maze": the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition'. This has been published here.