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Using historical literature databases as corpora
Schlüter, Julia (2013): Using historical literature databases as corpora, in: Manfred Krug und Julia Schlüter (Hrsg.), Research methods in language variation and change, 1. Auflage Cambridge [u.a.]: Cambridge Univ. Press, S. 119–135, doi: 10.1017/CBO9780511792519.009.
Faculty/Chair:
Author:
Title of the compilation:
Research methods in language variation and change
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Publisher Information:
Year of publication:
2013
Pages:
Edition:
1
ISBN:
978-0-521-18186-0
978-1-107-00490-0
Language:
English
Abstract:
The present chapter introduces a set of historical literature collections (available on CD-ROM or online) and their use as historical corpora for linguistic research. Despite the fact that the evolution of the English language is documented in a considerable body of written texts and is remarkably well represented in historical corpora, studies of earlier stages of English often suffer from a serious lack of data. Indeed, for many quantitative questions, the field of historical linguistics is hindered by the limits of electronically stored, computer-readable material.
As a backdrop to the present chapter, the most important diachronic corpora of English will be used and compared with the literature databases (Section 2). Issues of the representativeness of fictional writing with regard to other historical registers of writing in English will also be addressed. As a next step, a few technical tips on the computer-assisted exploitation of literature collections will be given (Section 3). To illustrate their use as corpora, three example studies from widely disparate areas will be outlined, thereby aligning data from standard diachronic corpora with such from the literature databases under discussion (Section 4). In the conclusion, the advantages and disadvantages of their use as corpora will be summarized (Section 5).
As a backdrop to the present chapter, the most important diachronic corpora of English will be used and compared with the literature databases (Section 2). Issues of the representativeness of fictional writing with regard to other historical registers of writing in English will also be addressed. As a next step, a few technical tips on the computer-assisted exploitation of literature collections will be given (Section 3). To illustrate their use as corpora, three example studies from widely disparate areas will be outlined, thereby aligning data from standard diachronic corpora with such from the literature databases under discussion (Section 4). In the conclusion, the advantages and disadvantages of their use as corpora will be summarized (Section 5).
GND Keywords: ; ;
Englisch
Literaturdatenbank
Korpus <Linguistik>
Keywords: ;
historical literature
database
DDC Classification:
RVK Classification:
Type:
Contribution to an Articlecollection
Activation date:
November 22, 2013
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Question on publication
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https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/2560