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                <title>The Yellow Nineties Online</title>
                <title>The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal, Part II.&#8212;Autumn 1895</title>
                <title type="EGV2_homel_madame"/>
                <editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
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            <editionStmt>
                <edition>
                    <date>2018</date>
                </edition>
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                <idno>EGV2_icon11</idno>
                <publisher>The Yellow Nineties Online</publisher>
                <pubPlace>Ryerson University</pubPlace>
                <address>
                        <addrLine>English Department</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>350 Victoria Street,</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>Toronto ON,</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>M5B 2K3</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>Canada</addrLine>
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                <availability>
                    <p>Usable according to the Creative Commons License <ref
                            target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/">Attribution
                            Non-commercial Share-alike</ref>.</p>
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                <biblStruct>
                    <monogr>
                        <editor>Unknown</editor>
                        <author>E. A. Hornel</author>
                        <title>Madame Chrysanthème</title>
                        <imprint>
                            <publisher>Patrick Geddes &amp; Colleagues</publisher>
                            <pubPlace>Edinburgh</pubPlace>
                            <publisher>T. Fisher Unwin</publisher>
                            <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
                            <date>Autumn 1895</date>
                            <biblScope>Hornel, E. A. "Madame Chrysanthème." <emph
                                    rend="italic">The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal Seasonal</emph>, vol. 2, Autumn 1895, p. 101. 
                                <emph rend="italic">Evergreen Digital Edition</emph>, edited by Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2016-2018. 
                                <emph rend="italic">Yellow Nineties 2.0</emph>, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2018.
                                https://1890s.ca/egv2_hornel_madame-2/</biblScope>
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            <editorialDecl>
                <p>Our editorial method is informed by social-text editing principles. By “text” we mean
                    verbal and visual printed material, including non-referential physical elements such as
                    bindings, page layouts, and ornaments. We view any text as the outcome of collaborative
                    processes that have specific manifestations at precise historical moments.
                    The Yellow Nineties Online publishes facsimile editions of a select collection of fin-de-
                    siècle aesthetic periodicals, together with paratexts of production and reception such as
                    cover designs, advertising materials, and reviews. This historical material is enhanced
                    by two kinds of peer-reviewed scholarly commentary: biographies of the periodicals’
                    contributors and associates; and critical introductions to each title and volume by
                    experts in the field. All scholarly material on the site is vetted by the editor(s) and peer-
                    reviewed by them and/or an international board of advisors. The site as a whole is peer-
                    reviewed by NINES (Networked Infrastructure for Nineteenth-Century Electronic
                    Scholarship). Contributors to the site retain personal copyright in their material. The
                    site is licensed with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0
                    license. Both primary and secondary materials, including all visual images, are marked
                    up in TEI- (Textual-Encoding Initiative) compliant XML (Extensible Markup
                    Language). To ensure maximum flexibility for users, magazines are available on the site
                    as virtual objects (facsimiles) in FlipBook form; in HTML for online reading; in PDF for
                    downloading and collecting; and in XML for those who wish to review and/or adapt our
                    tag sets. In order to make ornamental devices, such as initial letters, head- and tail-
                    pieces, searchable, we have developed a Database of Ornament in OMEKA, and linked it
                    to the relevant pages of each magazine edition. As a dynamic structure, a scholarly
                    website is always in process; Phase One of The Yellow Nineties Online (2010-2015) is
                    completed and Phase Two (2016-2021) is underway.</p>
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            <creation>
                <date>1895</date>
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                <language ident="en">English</language>
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                        <item>English literature -- 19th century -- Periodicals</item>
                        <item>Great Britain -- Periodicals</item>
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                        <item>Visual Art</item>
                        <note>Possible Genres (multiple): "Fiction," "Nonfiction," "Poetry," "Paratext" (TOC, prospecti, advertisements, frontmatter, titlepage), "Review" (older reviews),
                            "Criticism" (including critical introductions), "Visual Art" (images, bio images), Historiography (bios),"Bibliography"
                            (intros, crit, bios, anything with a bibliography attached), "Drama," "Ephemera," "Translation," "Religion," 
                            "Travel Writing," "Music, Other,")
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                </keywords>
                
                <keywords scheme="ninesType">
                    <list>
                        <item>Still Image</item>
                        <note>Possible Types (singular): "Periodical" (texts/most stuff), "Interactive Resource" (current writing, 
                            biographies, not old reviews), "Still Image" (images, visual art), "Physical Object" (posters,
                            prospecti)</note>
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                </keywords>
                
                <keywords scheme="ninesDiscipline">
                    <list>
                        <item>Book History</item>
                        <item>Art History</item>
                        <note>Possible Disciplines (multiple): "Book History (include for all periodical items)," "Literature," "Art History (use for art, also use for reviews)," "History (don't use in a general sense)," "Theatre Studies,"
                            "Musicology," "Philosophy," "Anthropology," "Science"</note>
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                    <note n="EGV2_11im.n1">
                        <title>Madame Chrysantheme</title>
                        <rs>EGV2_icon11</rs> Madame Chrysantheme E A Homel Hare SC 11 Autumn 1895 101 x Japonisme
                        pen and ink 1890s Japan outdoors garden stone pathway cherry blossoms female figure geisha
                        flowered kimono hair in bun with pins parasol pagodas fence Hare SC bottom left hand corner

                         </note>
                    <head>Madame Chrysantheme</head>
                    <figDesc>A Japanese woman with her back towards the viewer is looking out over a stone pathway
                        leading towards a garden containing several pagodas She is wearing a floral kimono and has
                        her hair pulled back into a bun which is decorated with pins With her right hand over her
                        head she is holding onto a parasol. On the inside of the parasol is Japanese script In the
                        top left hand corner are some cherry blossom flowers and branches In the bottom left hand
                        corner of the image is the engravers mark
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