The Atlantic Digitizes Its 165-Year-Old Archive, Unlocking Potential IP

The library includes original writing from Twain, Hemingway, Plath and other authors

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The Atlantic announced Monday morning that it has completed the nine-month project of digitizing its archive of more than 1,900 print magazines, a portfolio of writing that dates back to the founding of the magazine in 1857. 

The archive contains original works from American authors and thinkers, including Ernest Hemingway, Sylvia Plath, W.E.B. DuBois, Robert Frost and Mark Twain, all of which will be available on The Atlantic website—and subject to its standard paywall. The publisher first began uploading its writing to The Atlantic website in 1995, so the new material technically spans a time period of 133 years, said editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg.

While

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