Issues and challenges in compiling a corpus of Early Modern English plays for comparison with those of William Shakespeare

In this article I discuss the issues and challenges of compiling a corpus of historical plays by a range of playwrights that is highly suitable for use in comparative, corpus-based research into language style in Shakespeare’s plays. In discussing sources for digitised historical play-texts and crit...

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Main Author: Demmen Jane
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2020-03-01
Series:ICAME Journal
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/icame-2020-0002
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spelling doaj-6ad024f01d814becb06bcb591f327dc22021-09-05T21:02:00ZengSciendoICAME Journal1502-54622020-03-01441376810.2478/icame-2020-0002icame-2020-0002Issues and challenges in compiling a corpus of Early Modern English plays for comparison with those of William ShakespeareDemmen Jane0Lancaster UniversityIn this article I discuss the issues and challenges of compiling a corpus of historical plays by a range of playwrights that is highly suitable for use in comparative, corpus-based research into language style in Shakespeare’s plays. In discussing sources for digitised historical play-texts and criteria for making a selection for the present study, I argue that not just any set of Early Modern English plays constitutes a suitable basis upon which to make reliable claims about language style in Shakespeare’s plays relative to those of his peers. I point out factors outside of authorial choice which potentially have bearing on language style, such as sub-genre features and change over time. I also highlight some particular difficulties in compiling a corpus of historical texts, notably dating and spelling variation, and I explain how these were addressed. The corpus detailed in this article extends the prospects for investigating Shakespeare’s language style by providing a context into which it can be set and, as I indicate, is a valuable new publicly accessible resource for future research.https://doi.org/10.2478/icame-2020-0002
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Demmen Jane
spellingShingle Demmen Jane
Issues and challenges in compiling a corpus of Early Modern English plays for comparison with those of William Shakespeare
ICAME Journal
author_facet Demmen Jane
author_sort Demmen Jane
title Issues and challenges in compiling a corpus of Early Modern English plays for comparison with those of William Shakespeare
title_short Issues and challenges in compiling a corpus of Early Modern English plays for comparison with those of William Shakespeare
title_full Issues and challenges in compiling a corpus of Early Modern English plays for comparison with those of William Shakespeare
title_fullStr Issues and challenges in compiling a corpus of Early Modern English plays for comparison with those of William Shakespeare
title_full_unstemmed Issues and challenges in compiling a corpus of Early Modern English plays for comparison with those of William Shakespeare
title_sort issues and challenges in compiling a corpus of early modern english plays for comparison with those of william shakespeare
publisher Sciendo
series ICAME Journal
issn 1502-5462
publishDate 2020-03-01
description In this article I discuss the issues and challenges of compiling a corpus of historical plays by a range of playwrights that is highly suitable for use in comparative, corpus-based research into language style in Shakespeare’s plays. In discussing sources for digitised historical play-texts and criteria for making a selection for the present study, I argue that not just any set of Early Modern English plays constitutes a suitable basis upon which to make reliable claims about language style in Shakespeare’s plays relative to those of his peers. I point out factors outside of authorial choice which potentially have bearing on language style, such as sub-genre features and change over time. I also highlight some particular difficulties in compiling a corpus of historical texts, notably dating and spelling variation, and I explain how these were addressed. The corpus detailed in this article extends the prospects for investigating Shakespeare’s language style by providing a context into which it can be set and, as I indicate, is a valuable new publicly accessible resource for future research.
url https://doi.org/10.2478/icame-2020-0002
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