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University
Press Of Virginia Appoints Manager For New Electronic Imprint
October
23, 2001-- The University Press of Virginia has announced
the appointment of Mick Gusinde-Duffy, an editor with wide-ranging
experience in print and Internet publishing, to head its new electronic
publishing program.
The
program, supported by a $635,000 grant by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
and a matching amount from the University of Virginia, will create
the first electronic imprint devoted exclusively to publishing original,
peer-reviewed digital scholarship in the humanities.
Gusinde-Duffy,
formerly director of publishing at netLibrary, a startup Internet
business in Boulder, Colo., "brings a wealth of accomplishments
and experience as an editor and manager," said Penelope Kaiserlian,
director of the Virginia Press. "We look forward to having
him join the press Nov. 1 and getting the electronic imprint off
to a running start."
The
new electronic enterprise will publish large-scale scholarly projects
that involve computerized humanities research and are created in
digital format, not simply electronic versions of print books. Such
digital projects exceed the capabilities of print and are able to
include full archives of original source material and images in
multimedia formats, offering further avenues of research. A well-known
example is the award-winning "Valley of the Shadow" Civil
War history project created by U.Va. historian and Arts and Sciences
dean Edward L. Ayers and recently published on digital disks by
W.W. Norton.
In
addition to netLibrary, Gusinde-Duffy has worked as an associate
acquisitions editor at Westview Press in Boulder, an acquisitions
editor at the University of Utah Press and an acquisitions manager
at 29th Street Press in Loveland, Colo. He holds an M.A.
in English, with a concentration in publication management, from
Colorado State University and a B.A. in humanities and American
Studies from Middlesex Polytechnic in London.
John
Unsworth, director of U.Va.s Institute for Advanced Technology
in the Humanities and chair of the search committee that recommended
Gusinde-Duffy, said that "he will be a great addition to the
humanities computing community at the University. The active involvement
of the University Press in that community will bring an important
new perspective to bear on the digital humanities M.A. program and
on the digital library programs here."
Consulting
with experts from the Darden graduate business school to develop
the best business and cost-recovery models for the new enterprise,
the press will aim to publish its first electronic work by spring
2003, Kaiserlian said. The press expects to publish several electronic
projects a year in American history, American and British literature,
archaeology and architecture. The electronic publications could
be made available either on the Web or digital disks, or both, and
could be in conjunction with a print book.
Gusinde-Duffy
said he will look nationally and internationally for pioneering
digital work that emphasizes both creative scholarship and innovative
technology. Each project published will be approved by the presss
editorial board and will receive extensive peer review just as print
publications do.
"With
the wonderful technology resources within the University, this program
offers the opportunity to explore the potential of electronic publishing
more fully," Gusinde-Duffy said. "The goal is to bring
to digital scholarship the imprimatur of quality that a university
press represents."
Contact:
Bob Brickhouse, (434) 924-6856
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