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Building a Representative Theater Corpus

A Broader View of Nineteenth-Century French

  • Book
  • © 2019

Overview

  • Draws on the Digital Parisian Stage Project, a large and growing annotated corpus of French plays throughout history
  • Demonstrates methods for representative corpus design and compilation
  • Illustrates the benefits of representative corpus through case studies of negation and dislocation in nineteenth-century French

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Table of contents (8 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

The Digital Parisian Stage Project aims to compile a corpus of plays that are representative of performances in the theaters of Paris through history. This book surveys existing corpora that cover the nineteenth century, lays out the issue of corpus representativeness in detail, and, using a random sample of plays from this period, presents two case studies of language in use in the Napoleonic era. It presents a compelling argument for the compilation and use of representative corpora in linguistic study, and will be of interest to those working in the fields of corpus linguistics, digital humanities, and history of the theater.

Reviews

“With this exciting book, Angus Grieve-Smith provides answers to a long-standing issue in the study of languages: how can linguists provide the most full-fledged picture of how language was used in past centuries? Indeed, his historical syntax study of theater corpora not only enriches our knowledge of 19th Century French by documenting representations of spoken French; it also never loses sight of corpus design issues, such as social factors and the representativeness of sample collection.” (Camille Debras, Maître de conférences, Université Paris Nanterre, France)

“With this introduction to a new corpus of Parisian plays and two accompanying case studies, Grieve-Smith pushes us to reconsider questions of representation in historical written corpora, particularly when such corpora are intended to capture—to the extent possible—spontaneous conversational language. This book is a powerful reminder that inferences about past states of language, and how they relate to present states, areprofoundly affected by the data upon which we base our analyses.” (Alexandra D’Arcy, Associate Dean Research, Faculty of Humanities, University of Victoria, Canada, and author of Discourse-Pragmatic Variation in Context: Eight hundred years of LIKE (2017)) 


  

Authors and Affiliations

  • The New School, New York, USA

    Angus Grieve-Smith

About the author

Angus Grieve-Smith is Web Developer at the New School in New York, USA.  He completed his PhD in Linguistics at the University of New Mexico, USA.  He has taught Linguistics, French and Cognitive Science at Saint John's University, Montclair State University and Hofstra University, USA.

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