Surf these sites: CETH Home Page -- "The Center for Electronic Texts in the Humanities is dedicated to helping people access and implement research projects using electronic texts." Documenting the American South -- A collection of sources on Southern history, literature and culture from the colonial period through the first decades of the 20th century, including five electronic collections and over 400 books and manuscripts, provided by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Electronic Text Center -- University of Virginia -- Online text collections. Library Electronic Text Resource Service (LETRS) -- LETRS at Indiana University makes available many TEI texts and text processing tools and documentation -- including the Victorian Women Writers Project. TEI Guidelines for Electronic Text Encoding (P3) -- A freely available electronic version of the voluminous tagging guidelines that is made available by the Electronic Text Center at the University of Virginia. TEI Text Encoding in Libraries: Draft Guidelines for Best Encoding Practices -- A collaborative document produced as a result of the TEI and XML in Digital Libraries meeting at the Library of Congress in 1998. TEI and XML in Digital Libraries: Final Report -- A two day meeting at the Library of Congress sponsored by the Digital Library Federation. Text Encoding Initiative Home Page -- "The Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) is an international project to develop guidelines for the preparation and interchange of electronic texts for scholarly research, and to satisfy a broad range of uses by the language industries more generally." The Oxford Text Archive -- "The Oxford Text Archive holds several thousand electronic texts and linguistic corpora, in a variety of languages. Its holdings include electronic editions of works by individual authors, standard reference works such as the Bible and mono-/bilingual dictionaries, and a range of language corpora."
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