Electronic Texts in the Humanities: Principles and Practice

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OUP Oxford, 2000 M11 23 - 228 páginas
With word processing and the Internet, computing is much more part and parcel of the everyday life of the humanities scholar, but computers can do much more than assist with writing or Internet searching. This book introduces a range of tools and techniques for manipulating and analysing electronic texts in the humanities. It shows how electronic texts can be used for the literary analysis, linguistic analysis, authorship attribution, and the preparation and publication of electronic scholarly editions. It assesses the ways in which research in corpus and computational linguistics can feed into better electronic tools for humanities research. The tools and techniques discussed in this book will feed into better Internet tools and pave the way for the electronic scholar of the twenty-first century.
 

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Contenido

Why Electronic Texts?
1
Creating and Acquiring Electronic Texts
11
Text Encoding
24
Concordance and Text Retrieval Programs
49
Literary Analysis
66
Linguistic Analysis
85
Stylometry and Attribution Studies
104
Textual Criticism and Electronic Editions
124
Dictionaries and Lexical Databases
146
Where Next?
165
References
172
Index
199
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Susan Hockey is Professor of Library and Information Studies, University College London

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