3. Van Nu en Straks – The Letters
http://www.vnsbrieven.org/
4. ‘Van Nu en Straks. The Letters’:
What?
1419 letters: main part in Dutch, 180 in French
Reference to
– 2,500 persons
– 500 place names
– 1,000 book titles
– 650 written articles
– 350 poems etc.
3,600 internal links
Critical and diplomatic transcription of all the letters
Detailed description of metadata
More than 3,000 digital facsimile pictures
Browsing and searching
Viewing and exporting selections of letters to XHTML, XML or PDF
Visualise the letters as reading text, diplomatic transcription, or XML source
5. ‘Van Nu en Straks. The Letters’:
How?
Each letter = TEI file
Description of metadata in <teiHeader>
eXist-driven web interface
6. Why does it do what it does?
Because
wanted it to do so.
9. (1) TEI: what?
“A consortium which collectively develops and maintains a
standard for the representation of texts in digital form.”
“Its chief deliverable is a set of Guidelines which specify
encoding methods for machine-readable texts, chiefly in the
humanities, social sciences and linguistics.”
“Since 1994, the TEI Guidelines have been widely used by
libraries, museums, publishers, and individual scholars to
present texts for online research, teaching, and preservation.”
http://www.tei-c.org/index.xml
12. editing with TEI:
too many downsides?
individual steep learning curve
institutional in-house skills, funding
technical no subset for correspondence
only a few projects in Flanders
these projects take years (trial and error)
14. Because yes,
It is quite an enterprise
There are other (faster and more simple) ways
but
It offers the best guarantee that your data will be
– safe
– freely accessible
– readable for man and machine
Initiative worth taking
15. (2) TEI Guidelines: what?
“The TEI Guidelines are designed to be
customized, and specific projects and
disciplinary groups often create
customized versions reflecting particular
needs and practices.”
http://www.tei-c.org/Guidelines/
17. What hear
designed to be
customized
for
particular needs
and practices
What know
customization can be quite
an undertaking
and
some needs are
more particular than others
18. Editing letters with TEI:
too many downsides?
no TEI tagset specifically for letters
use elements and markup schemes from other
TEI subsets
only a handful of TEI projects for letters
all these projects: first (long) phase =
designing a specific markup scheme
19. e.g. Van Nu en Straks Letters
= combination
(1) standard TEI subsets
(2) modifications of standard TEI elements
and attributes
<add>, <note> and <seg> as global elements
(3) new elements and attributes
<letIdentifier>, <letHeading>, <physDesc> and
<envOcc/> in <letDesc>
<envelope> and <calc> in <ps>
21. No other part of your
edition will reflect more
of your personal view
on what text really is,
how the text that you’re
editing is structured etc.
So: this is the awesome part
of your edition, your core
business
(no matter what they’ll tell you)
23. (3) Scholarly editions: where?
“[T]he Consortium provides a variety of
resources and training events for learning
TEI, information on projects using the TEI, a
bibliography of TEI-related publications, and
software developed for or adapted to the
TEI.”
http://www.tei-c.org/index.xml
26. Publishing TEI/XML-based scholarly editions:
too many downsides?
matter of credibility and visibility
- You need a nest that is both safe and big enough to
publish your work
(university, centre for digital humanities)
- Open access = source files available
- You should at least make a minimal effort to present your
data in a more or less esthetically acceptable way
31. (4) Making your own edition in TEI:
why (not)?
Complex searching (place
names, titles, foreign
words etc.)
Study and show textual
variation, structure of text,
sources for humanities
Several output formats
Sources have hierarchical
structure
Simple searching (words)
Sources for/from exact
sciences
1 output format (e.g. only
HTML or book)
Phenomena beyond clear
structures or hierarchies
32. TEI
Complex searching (place
names, titles, foreign
words etc.)
Study and show textual
variation, structure of text,
sources for humanities
Several output formats
Sources have hierarchical
structure
33. But
You need that big and safe nest
not only for publishing
but also for making your edition
it takes a village
35. Conclusion
1) Take initiative
2) Create the edition that
suits as many purposes as
possible, but do it like you
think it should be done
3) Make sure people get
(and like) to see what
you’ve made
4) Get as many help as
possible