+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Date post: 30-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: edmund
View: 82 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process. Elena Pierazzo Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King’s College London [email protected]. Are Modern Manuscripts the same of Medieval Manuscripts?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
40
Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process Elena Pierazzo Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King’s College London [email protected]
Transcript
Page 1: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Encoding the Document,Encoding the Process

Elena Pierazzo

Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King’s College London

[email protected]

Page 2: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Are Modern Manuscripts the same of Medieval Manuscripts?

They have different functions: private/note taking vs. “publication”, public circulation (most of the time)

They look different: unplanned vs. planned writing

Modern Ms. contain a mixture of text and other stuff which phenomenology is not always easy to re-conduct to medieval manuscripts (or so we thought)

They can be organised in sequences of drafts Does TEI provide enough support for

Modern manuscripts?

Page 3: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

The beginning The idea was firstly raised on the TEI MS

SIG first meeting: Nancy 2003 The issue was arisen again with high

priority in the MS SIG Agenda in 2007P5 official release

Working group within MS SIG in November 2008 (London, TEI MM)

Page 4: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

The Working Group

Fotis Jannidis (chair) Elena Pierazzo Malte Rehbein + Lou Burnard (Paolo D’Iorio)

& Gregor Middell Moritz Wissenbach

Page 5: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

The Workshop

Sponsored by ALLC, ACH, TEI, Moore Institute

Paris, ENS – ITEM, 14-15 May 2009 Experts on Genetic Editions, not necessarily

on Digital Editions Invited experts: Anne Bohnenkamp, John

Bryant, Aurèle Crasson, Jean-Daniel Fekete, Daniel Ferrer, Hans Walter Gabler, Axel Gellhaus, Almuth Grésillon, Claus Huitfeldt, Dirk van Hulle, Jean-Louis Lebrave, Wolfgang Lukas, Kenneth M. Price, Kathryn Sutherland

Page 6: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Road map Officially presented at the TEI Members’

Meeting in Ann Arbor (Michigan) 2009 Beta test open, up to end of January 2010 February/March 2010: revision April 2010: submission to the TEI council as a

formal proposal Accepted in principle November 2010: Workshop and testing at TEI

Members’ Meeting in Zadar

Page 7: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Documents or Texts?

Page 8: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Documents and TextsYing and Yang, Body and Soul

In the editorial process it is impossible not to consider them both…

Page 9: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Genesis of what? Documents? (tears, cuts, patches, stitches…) Texts? (corrections, revisions, additions,

deletions, transpositions?)

Both, of course!

Page 10: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Three parts Documents Encoding Transcription Enhancement Genetic encoding

Page 11: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

TEI provides a way to encode TEXTS, but sometimes

The process to make the document is at least as important as the text that it contains

The text can be determined by the document The text is graphically presented There is no text: non-linear texts are non-texts

(Ferrer)

Page 12: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Where is the text?

Page 13: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process
Page 14: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Are Modern Manuscript the same of Medieval Manuscript?

Not really…

Page 15: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

<ge:document> a sibling of <text> and <facsimile> represents the physical structure of a

document, in terms of written <surface>s, and <zone>s of writing.

a new <ge:line> element is needed to represent topographic lines

a new <ge:patch> element is needed to represent fragmentary surfaces

Page 16: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process
Page 17: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

<text> <body> <div type="diary-entry"> <dateline> <date value="2009-04-01"> 1 April 2009 </date> </dateline> <p><lb/>Fed Birds in the park today.<lb/> Might write an article about <lb/> the Thick-billed Warbler. </p> </div> <div type="note" rend="rotated"> <p><lb/>Samaria is a Greek <lb/> brand of water that <lb/> comes from thenatural <lb/> springs of Stilos, in <lb/> Crete</p> </div> </body></text>

<ge:document> <surface ulx="0" uly="0" lrx="200" lry="300"> <zone ulx="10" uly="43" lrx="185" lry="84" rotate="0"> <zone> <ge:line rend="right"> 1 April 2009 </ge:line> </zone> <ge:line>Fed Birds in the park today.</ge:line> <ge:line>Might write an article about </ge:line> <ge:line>the Thick-billed Warbler. </ge:line> </zone> <zone ulx="9" uly="20" lrx="70" lry="60" rotate="90"> <ge:line>Samaria is a Greek </ge:line> <ge:line>brand of water that</ge:line> <ge:line>comes from the natural</ge:line> <ge:line>springs of Stilos, in </ge:line> <ge:line>Crete </ge:line> </zone> </surface></ge:document>

Page 18: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Can we combine the two views? Sort of…

<ge:document> <surface ulx="0" uly="0" lrx="200" lry="300"> <zone stage="#stage1" seq="0" ulx="10" uly="43" lrx="185" lry="84"> <zone> <milestone unit="date" spanTo="#endDate"/>1 April 2009 <anchor xml:id="endDate"/> </zone> <milestone unit="p" spanTo="#p2"/> <ge:line>Fed Birds in the park today.</ge:line> <ge:line> Might write an article about </ge:line> <ge:line>the Thick-billed Warbler.</ge:line> </zone> <zone stage="#stage2" ulx="9" uly="20" lrx="70" lry="60" rotate="90"> <milestone unit="p" xml:id="p2" spanTo="#end"/> <ge:line>Samaria is a Greek</ge:line> <ge:line>brand of water that</ge:line> <ge:line>comes from the natural</ge:line> <ge:line>springs of Stilos, in</ge:line> <ge:line>Crete</ge:line> <anchor xml:id="end"/> </zone> </surface></ge:document>

Page 19: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

The content of <zone> <ge:line> <table> Text!

Page 20: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Patches

<surface> <zone> <ge:line>Poem</ge:line> <ge:line>As in Visions of — at</ge:line> <ge:line>night —</ge:line> <ge:line>All sorts of fancies running through</ge:line> <ge:line>the head</ge:line> </zone> <ge:patch type="newsprint" binder="glue" height="40" width="90"> Spring has just set in here, and the weather.... a steamer <zone> <ge:metaMark function="sequence">2</ge:metaMark> </zone></ge:patch> <ge:patch type="newsprint" binder="glue" height="35" width="90"> "The shores on either side of the Sound are... The In- <zone> <ge:metaMark function="sequence">3</ge:metaMark> </zone></ge:patch></surface>

Page 21: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Exercise 1: Jane Austen Go to www.janeausten.ac.uk Select Manuscripts Select Volume the First – Text From the dropdown menu select page 1

Page 22: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

New Transcriptional Features <ge:metamark> : markup already present in

the document <ge:rewrite> : clarification or fixation <ge:used>: marked as used elsewhere <ge:undo>: a cancelled revision <ge:redo> <ge:transpose> & <ge:transposeGrp> <ge:mod>: generic element for modifications

Page 23: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Metamark

<del><ge:metaMark function="flag" targets="#s1">lege</ge:metaMark><s xml:id="s1" >Ock en schullen de bruwere des hilgen dages nicht over <lb/>setten noch uppe den stillen fridach bruwen.</s> <add><s>Noch nymande<lb/>over setten, se en sehin denne erst, dat uppe den bonen<lb/>neyn stro noch, huw noch flaß ligghe, by pine eyner halven<lb/>roden, deme bruwere so wol alse dem bruwheren to murende.</s></add></del>

Page 24: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Clarification

<ge:line>...Sku<ge:rewrite cause="unclear">l<ge:rewrite>dren</ge:line>

Page 25: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Fixation

<ge:rewrite cause="fix" hand=”#ja2" stage="#s1">Now, if we could get <del stage=“1">but</del> a young Heiress</ge:rewrite>

Page 26: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Used<surface>

<ge:used rend="cross" spanTo="#X2"/> <zone> <ge:line rend="underline">The Poet</ge:line> <ge:line><del rend="strikethrough">I think</del> His sight is the</ge:line> <ge:line> sight of the ? and</ge:line> <ge:line>has sent the instinct of the</ge:line> <ge:line>? dog</ge:line> </zone>

<zone> <ge:line>I think <ge:rewrite>ten</ge:rewrite> million</ge:line> <!-- ... --> <ge:line>well; those <subst> <del rend="strikethrough">supple-fingered gods</del> <add>journeymen divine.</add> </subst></ge:line> <anchor xml:id="X2"/> </zone></surface>

Page 27: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Undo (and instant correction)

<ge:line> che e’ <hi rend="underline"><ge:undo spanTo="#x2"/>si <anchor xml:id="x2"/> rechi a’</hi> <del rend="overstrike” instant="true">dotti</del> <hi rend="underline">denti</hi> l’un d’essi cibi</ge:line>

Page 28: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Transposition

<ge:line><seg xml:id="ib01">bör</seg><ge:metaMark rend="underline" function="transposition” targets="#ib1" place="above">2.</ge:metaMark> og <seg xml:id="ib02" >hör</seg><ge:metaMark rend="underline" function="transposition" targets="#ib02" place="above">1.</ge:metaMark></ge:line> <ge:transposeGrp> <ge:transpose> <ptr target="#ib02"/> <ptr target="#ib01"/> </ge:transpose> </ge:transposeGrp>

Page 29: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

A generic modification

Semantic Documentary

<ge:line>I should <subst> <del>soon</del> <add>shortly</add></subst>do</ge:line>

<ge:line>I should <ge:mod rend="strikethrough">do</ge:mod><ge:mod rend="interlinear” >soon</ge:mod>shortly do</ge:line>

Page 30: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Support on existing markup

Alternative readings

<zone> <ge:line>Alone <seg type="alternative" xml:id="alt1">before</seg> <add place="above" type="alternative" xml:id="alt2">beside</add> his native river —</ge:line> <alt targets="#alt1 #alt2" mode="excl" weights="0 1"/></zone>

Page 31: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Exercise 2: The Blake Archive Go to www.blakearchive.org Enter the archive Go to Text Search and search for Devil Choose first item Songs of Innocence and

of Experience Then first item again Then object 39 Open the image as well

Page 32: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Genesis Genesis within the same document Genesis across documents The passage from correction within a

document to another document can happen at anytime and it is not a one way process

Page 33: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Within the same Doc: Stages and Revision Campaigns

<profileDesc> <creation> <ge:stageNotes ordered="true"> <ge:stageNote xml:id="ST-1">First stage, written in ink by a scribe</ge:stageNote> <ge:stageNote xml:id="ST-2">Second stage, written in Goethe's hand using pencil</ge:stageNote> <ge:stageNote xml:id="ST-3">Fixation of the revised passages and further revisions by Goethe using ink</ge:stageNote> <ge:stageNote xml:id="ST-4">Addition of another stanza in a different hand, probably at a later stage</ge:stageNote> </ge:stageNotes> </creation></profileDesc>

Page 34: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Transposition (with stages)

<ge:line><seg xml:id="ib01">bör</seg><ge:metaMark rend="underline" function="transposition” targets="#ib1" place="above” stage=“#ST2”>2.</ge:metaMark> og <seg xml:id="ib02" >hör</seg><ge:metaMark rend="underline" function="transposition" targets="#ib02" place="above” stage=“#ST2”>1.</ge:metaMark></ge:line> <ge:transposeGrp> <ge:transpose> <ptr target="#ib02"/> <ptr target="#ib01"/> </ge:transpose> </ge:transposeGrp>

Page 35: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Genesis across docs<profileDesc> <creation> <date notAfter="1816-07-18"/> <ge:stageNotes ordered="true"> <ge:stageNote xml:id="mod1" when="1816-07-16">The first draft of <title>Persuasion</title> is completed by the <date>July 16 1816</date> written after the word <q>Finis</q> at <ref target="#pers-30">page 30</ref>.</ge:stageNote> <ge:stageNote xml:id="mod2" notBefore="1816-07-16">After the <date>16th of July</date> Austen starts revision of the two final chapters, by rewriting the end and adding a new block (<ref target="#transp-1">pages 32-35</ref>) to be inserted at <ref target="#insertion-p1">page 19</ref>. This stage is documented by the deletion of the date (<date>July 16 1816</date>) at <ref target="#pers-30">page 30</ref>, and the addition of more text and of a new date (<date>July 18. 1816</date>) at <ref target="#pers-31">page 31</ref></ge:stageNote> <ge:stageNote notBefore="1816-07-18” xml:id=“mod3”>Before publication, after <date>July 18th, 1816</date> chapters 10-11 were broken into three chapters, 10, 11, 12, as witnessed by the print.</ge:stageNote> </ge:stageNotes> </creation></profileDesc>

Page 36: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Let’s start by grouping!

<teiCorpus> <teiHeader> <!-- information about the dossier --> </teiHeader> <xi:include href="document1.xml"/> <xi:include href="document2.xml"/> <xi:include href="document3.xml"/></teiCorpus>

Page 37: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Then let’s organise our group

<graph type="directed"> <node xml:id="A" value="http://edition.net/witness/A"> <label>A</label> </node> <node xml:id="B" value="http://edition.net/witness/B"> <label>B</label> </node> <!-- more nodes --> <arc xml:id="AC" from="#A" to="#C" value="http://edition.net/genetic/analysis#ac"/> <arc xml:id="BC" from="#B" to="#C" value="http://edition.net/genetic/analysis#bc"/> <!-- more arcs --></graph>

Page 38: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Genesis of documents

<ge:document> <surface ulx="0" uly="0" lrx="200" lry="300"> <zone>...</zone> </surface> <damageSpan spanTo="#p3"/> <gap extent="1" unit="folio"> <desc>Stub of a missing folio</desc> </gap> <surface ulx="0" uly="0" lrx="200" lry="300" xml:id="p3"> <zone>...</zone> </surface></ge:document>

http://www.janeausten.ac.uk/facsimile/blvolsecond/65-66.html

Page 39: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

Exercise 3: Whitman archive Go to www.whitmanarchive.org Select Manuscripts > Poetry Manuscripts Select ninth item: America Old-World Bards

Page 40: Encoding the Document, Encoding the Process

For more Info

http://www.tei-c.org/SIG/Manuscripts/genetic.html


Recommended