(no title)
acabal | 10 months ago
That is not at all what I said.
> You can't claim to care about preserving the works while changing them, and that is changing them.
We do not and have never made that claim. We are creating our own editions of these public domain books, not engaging in historical preservation.
If you want to read classic books in their original spelling, then you must locate first editions. Editors and publishers have updated both spelling and punctuation as a matter of course for centuries. Just look at any three editions of any Jane Austen novel - and you could never read an edition of Shakespeare more recent than 1800.
lanyard-textile|10 months ago
As someone who writes I greatly dislike this. These are my words, not yours.
A translation across time and generations is a completely different matter.
contact9879|10 months ago
Today, it's much easier for authors to have a greater say in the final presentation due to the digital composition process
joseda-hg|10 months ago
Modernizing / adapting is the least damaging change to be done here
eadmund|10 months ago
I think that Standard Ebooks is a great-sounding project, but I honestly found your response not just flippant, but passive-aggressively rude to the original poster.
But — full disclosure — I also think that it would be a good idea to preserve the spellings found in the original editions you are digitising. So perhaps I inclined to feel the bite of your response more than someone who just doesn’t care.
bentley|10 months ago
I didn’t read it that way at all. How would you have worded it in such a way as to sincerely express the stated sentiment without coming across as passive‐aggressively rude?
Brian_K_White|10 months ago