About This Resource


About This Resource

This resource aims to make electronic texts of the Quarterly Review available from its inception in 1809 up till 1822, when the involvement of William Gifford, its first editor, ceased. The Quarterly Review in particular was chosen for digitization partly because of its cultural centrality, and partly because of its close ties to literary Romanticism through the involvement of Walter Scott and Robert Southey. It was preferred to its main rival, the Edinburgh Review, because, whilst there have been a number of studies of the early days of the Edinburgh, very little work on the Quarterly during the period of Gifford's editorship has so far been undertaken. For a more in-depth discussion of the importance of the Quarterly Review, please consult the introduction.

Early issues of the Quarterly Review were kept in type, and reprinted with alterations over a period of several years, without listing any details of these new impressions. In the absence of a critical recension of the text, bibliographical notes for each volume of the Quarterly Review have been included to give as many details as possible about the copy text, and the relationship to it of the etext here published. See the individual contents pages for each volume to access the biliographical notes.

This resource was edited by Dr Gavin Budge, School of English, University of Central England in Birmingham (UK). It was prepared in conjunction with the staff of the Digital Library, University of Central England (UCEEL). UCEEL is the UCE Birmingham's "digital library" providing secure, controlled, web-based access to primary rather than secondary material not previously available electronically. Most content is available exclusively to UCE staff and students with special copyright and IPR permission.

This text is encoded in HTML, but features no frames and a limited use of tables. It will work best with Netscape 4.0 or Internet Explorer 4.0 or higher or a comparable browser; earlier browsers may not display everything properly. Because you may enter and exit these files along multiple paths, you may need to use the back-arrow button on your browser to return to your starting point. The text of the resource is fully searchable. The files were marked up in HTML by Joseph Byrne at the University of Maryland. The volume cover and contents page were also designed and marked up by Joseph Byrne.