CETH TEI Pilot ProjectsWendellPiezCenter for Electronic Texts in the Humanities
(CETH)piez@rci.rutgers.edu AnthonyLioiCenter for Electronic Texts in the Humanities
(CETH)lioi@rci.rutgers.edu JuliaLougovayaCenter for Electronic Texts in the Humanities
(CETH)lougovay@gandalf.rutgers.edu Mary JoWattsCenter for Electronic Texts in the Humanities
(CETH)mwatts@rci.rutgers.edu 1996University of BergenBergen, NorwayALLC/ACH 1996editorAnneLindebjergEspenS.OreØysteinReigemencoderSaraA.SchmidtSGMLpublishing (electronic)teachingThe CETH TEI Pilot Projects are a group of demonstrations of high-quality
scholarly and educational resources created in conformance with the Guidelines
of the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) for the markup of Humanities texts in SGML
(Standard Generalized Markup Language). We are using off-the-shelf SGML creation
and browsing tools (SoftQuad Author/Editor; WordPerfect with SGML; SoftQuad
Panorama) to develop prototype electronic text resources which take advantage of
SGML and TEI functionalities (especially for cross-platform compatibility and
networked publication), which can be created and browsed via PC platforms, and
which further develop and extend the concept of a networked electronic edition
of a text. A central goal of the project is the production of documentation
which will help scholars and educators at other institutions to assess our work,
to design similar projects of their own, and to open discussion not only on the
means but on the purposes and potential uses of such editions.Please consult the project front page on the World-wide Web, presently at (currently in
progress), for a more detailed overview."The Child in the House": An Electronic
EditionWendell PiezAn electronic edition with output in two forms: print (using WordPerfect with
SGML) and networked via the World-wide Web (using SoftQuad Panorama). The
project is intended to provide a prototype for a high-quality "fascicle"
edition of a text, suitable both for networked browsing and for
micro-publishing. The editor of this project also offers documentation
introducing Humanities scholars to the TEI, as well as supporting
documentation for using WordPerfect 6.1, SGML Edition, as a publishing
utility for TEI texts."Their Eyes Were Watching God, Chapter 1"Anthony LioiAn edition with critical commentary which demonstrates the uses of TEI
linking mechanisms in a hypertext rendition. The markup traces the
occurrence of thematically-related tropes in the text, linking them with
each other and with the commentary. This project offers a prototype of a
critical edition useful not only as a pedagogical tool (demonstrating the
function of thematic figuration in a literary text) but as a form of
disseminating research results.John Donne's Elegy "Love's Progress"Mary Jo WattsThis edition is a rendition of a Renaissance manuscript (extant in Rutgers
Special Collections and Archives) in facsimile and analytical transcription.
Alternate style sheets provide different views of the text. The
transcription is linked dynamically to a digital image of the manuscript,
which in some views is more legible than the original.Virgil's Aeneid Book I, with the Latin
Commentaries of ServiusJulia LougovayaAn edition of the poem with line-by-line commentaries, interactively
accessible with hypertext functionality. A very useful tool for the student
of Virgil, the Latin language, and the history of literary criticism, this
project shows how electronic means not only can provide broad access to a
relatively obscure text (the fourth-century commentaries of Servius) but
also how hypertext linking between these commentaries and their subject,
Virgil's poem, can improve a reader's ability to navigate and interpret both
texts.