Les archives sans repos: enjeux d’une édition électronique

In 1970, Gabrielle Roy published Windflower (La Riviere sans repos), a short novel preceded by three short stories “Nouvelles Esquimaudes.” Conserved in the Gabrielle Roy collection of Library and Archives Canada, the archives contain a myriad of manuscripts, dactylograms and sets of proofs, genuine...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Digital Studies/Le champ numérique
Main Authors: Jacinthe Martel, Nathanaël Pono
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Open Library of the Humanities 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.16995/dscn.351
http://www.digitalstudies.org/articles/10.16995/dscn.351/galley/331/download/
https://www.digitalstudies.org/articles/10.16995/dscn.351/galley/331/download/
https://www.digitalstudies.org/articles/10.16995/dscn.351/
https://academic.microsoft.com/#/detail/2968477666
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Summary:In 1970, Gabrielle Roy published Windflower (La Riviere sans repos), a short novel preceded by three short stories “Nouvelles Esquimaudes.” Conserved in the Gabrielle Roy collection of Library and Archives Canada, the archives contain a myriad of manuscripts, dactylograms and sets of proofs, genuine evidence of word done by this author. In this article, the researchers put forward a meticulous genetic study of the three “Nouvelles Esquimaudes,” which takes the “Voyage en Ungava,” a travel journal written by Gabrielle Roy in 1961 in Fort Chimo, as its starting point. The authors highlight the novelist’s work methods, notably her horizontal and vertical rewriting. The digital publishing of the Windflower archives allows in itself the usage of an enlarged critical apparatus, but it also contains several specific concerns, thus raising several challenges. Resume En 1970, Gabrielle Roy publie La Riviere sans repos, un court roman precede de trois « Nouvelles Esquimaudes ». Les archives, conservees dans le fonds Gabrielle Roy a Bibliotheques et Archives Canada, comportent de nombreux manuscrits, dactylogrammes et jeux d’epreuves, veritables temoins du travail effectue par la romanciere. Dans le cadre de cet article, les chercheurs proposent une etude genetique minutieuse des trois « Nouvelles Esquimaudes » qui prend pour point de depart « Voyage en Ungava », journal d’un sejour effectue par Gabrielle Roy a Fort-Chimo en 1961. Ils mettent en lumiere les methodes de travail de la romanciere, notamment ses reecritures horizontales et verticales. L’edition electronique des archives de La Riviere sans repos permet quant a elle l’utilisation d’un appareil critique augmente, mais elle comporte aussi de nombreux enjeux specifiques et souleve donc plusieurs defis. Mots-cles: Gabrielle Roy; La Riviere sans repos; Nouvelles Esquimaudes; roman; Canada; Fort-Chimo; genetique; archives; manuscrits; L’edition electronique; HyperRoy; XXe siecle In 1970, Gabrielle Roy Published Windflower (La Riviere sans repos), a short novel ...