Conceptual overview
Citation
Scholarship in the humanities depends on citation to identify its unique objects of study. This section presents work on technology-independent citation using URNs: passages of texts (implemented with CTS URNs), physical artifacts (CITE2 URNs) and documentary images (CITE2 URNs, including extension for region of interest on an image)
- Citation and scholarship (concepts implemented in the
CitableBase
package) - Citing texts (the
CitableText
package) - Citing artifacts
- Citing images
Digital texts
All analysis of digital texts must take account of how the text’s writing system, or orthography, is digitally encoded, and how we can derive citable digital editions from sources in a variety of structured text formats. I’m interested in digital scholarly editions of physical texts that encode both textual and non-textual contents.
- Writing and orthographic systems (the
Orthography
package) - Making archival documents citable (the
CitableTeiReaders
package) - Compiling univocal textual editions (the
EditionBuidlers
package)
Morphological parsing
Morphological parsing is especially important for the morphologically rich languages I study.