HyperHamlet – Intricacies of Data Selection

HyperHamlet is a database of allusions to and quotations from Shakespeare's Hamlet, which is supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation as a joint venture between the Departments of English and German Philology, and the Image and Media Lab at the University of Basel. The compilation of...

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Main Author: Sixta Quassdorf
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2009-04-01
Series:Linguistik Online
Online Access:https://bop.unibe.ch/linguistik-online/article/view/506
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spelling doaj-8799d6b3d552450a9ee245c36a69148a2021-09-13T12:53:28ZdeuBern Open PublishingLinguistik Online1615-30142009-04-0138210.13092/lo.38.506HyperHamlet – Intricacies of Data SelectionSixta QuassdorfHyperHamlet is a database of allusions to and quotations from Shakespeare's Hamlet, which is supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation as a joint venture between the Departments of English and German Philology, and the Image and Media Lab at the University of Basel. The compilation of a corpus, whose aim it is to document the "Shakespeare phenomenon", is intricate on more than one level: the desired transdisciplinary approach between linguistics, literary and cultural studies entails data selection from a vast variety of sources; the pragmatic nature of intertextual traces, i.e. their dependence on and subordination to new contexts, further adds to formal heterogeneity. This is not only a challenge for annotation, but also for data selection. As the recognition of intertextual traces is more often than not based on intuition, this paper analyses the criteria which underlie intuition so that it can be operationalised for scholarly corpus compilation. An analogue to the pragmatic model of ostensive-inferential communication with its three constitutive parts of speaker's meaning, sentence meaning and hearer's meaning has been used for analytical heuristics. Authorial intent – in a concrete as well as in an abstract historical sense – origin and specific encyclopaedic knowledge have been found to be the basic assumptions underlying data selection, while quantitative factors provide supporting evidence. https://bop.unibe.ch/linguistik-online/article/view/506
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sixta Quassdorf
spellingShingle Sixta Quassdorf
HyperHamlet – Intricacies of Data Selection
Linguistik Online
author_facet Sixta Quassdorf
author_sort Sixta Quassdorf
title HyperHamlet – Intricacies of Data Selection
title_short HyperHamlet – Intricacies of Data Selection
title_full HyperHamlet – Intricacies of Data Selection
title_fullStr HyperHamlet – Intricacies of Data Selection
title_full_unstemmed HyperHamlet – Intricacies of Data Selection
title_sort hyperhamlet – intricacies of data selection
publisher Bern Open Publishing
series Linguistik Online
issn 1615-3014
publishDate 2009-04-01
description HyperHamlet is a database of allusions to and quotations from Shakespeare's Hamlet, which is supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation as a joint venture between the Departments of English and German Philology, and the Image and Media Lab at the University of Basel. The compilation of a corpus, whose aim it is to document the "Shakespeare phenomenon", is intricate on more than one level: the desired transdisciplinary approach between linguistics, literary and cultural studies entails data selection from a vast variety of sources; the pragmatic nature of intertextual traces, i.e. their dependence on and subordination to new contexts, further adds to formal heterogeneity. This is not only a challenge for annotation, but also for data selection. As the recognition of intertextual traces is more often than not based on intuition, this paper analyses the criteria which underlie intuition so that it can be operationalised for scholarly corpus compilation. An analogue to the pragmatic model of ostensive-inferential communication with its three constitutive parts of speaker's meaning, sentence meaning and hearer's meaning has been used for analytical heuristics. Authorial intent – in a concrete as well as in an abstract historical sense – origin and specific encyclopaedic knowledge have been found to be the basic assumptions underlying data selection, while quantitative factors provide supporting evidence.
url https://bop.unibe.ch/linguistik-online/article/view/506
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