Brown University Women Writers Project
Women's writing in English, 1330-1830. Access to list of 200 texts. Print copies may be ordered. Most texts are not yet available electronically, with the exception of two collections: Renaissance Women Online (approx. 115 texts, but only 24 are currently active) Restoration to Romanticism (4 texts).
Emory Women Writers Resource Project
The Emory Women Writers Resource Project is a collection of edited and unedited texts by women writing in English from the seventeenth century through the nineteenth century. The Project is a pedagogical tool, designed to offer graduate and undergraduate students in various disciplines the opportunity to edit their own texts.
The Genesis Project
The Genesis project is located at the Women's Library in London. It is a "mapping initiative, funded by the UK Research Support Libraries Programme (RSLP) to identify and develop access to women's history sources in the British Isles. The Genesis Project Team is currently designing the database which will enable [researchers] to search over 2000 archive, library and museum collections from 45 institutions relating to women's history. This will be available in June 2002. ..." Genesis also has a "Guide to Sources, a comprehensive list of useful websites relating to women's history sources".
The Orlando Project: An Integrated History of Women's Writing in the British Isles
"the first full scholarly history of women’s writing in the British Isles... that addresses issues raised by recent feminist thinkers and scholars of women’s writing. To facilitate the breadth of this work, we are using computers throughout the project to store and manipulate basic research material in the form of biographical accounts of most British women writers, as well as a detailed chronology."
Victorian Women Writers Project.
The goal of the Victorian Women Writers Project is to produce highly accurate transcriptions of works by British women writers of the 19th century, encoded using the Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML). The works, selected with the assistance of the Advisory Board, will include anthologies, novels, political pamphlets, religious tracts, children's books, and volumes of
poetry and verse drama. Editor: Perry Willett, Indiana University.