Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
This is a forum for people with knowledge of the Bible in its original languages to discuss its manuscripts and textual history from the perspective of historic evangelical theology.
The membership of this blog is made up of evangelicals involved in academic study of textual criticism. Those with appropriate expertise and theological convictions who wish to be considered for membership should contact Peter Head or Tommy Wasserman. Those applying for membership must indicate that they have read either the OT or the NT in its original language(s), should be actively involved in text-critical research, and should be already contributing to the blog through comments. They should give e-mail details of an academic and a pastoral referee, a summary of their academic and/or ministry involvement, a statement of their doctrinal commitment (which may be by reference to various classic evangelical statements of faith, e.g. 39 Articles, Westminster Confession), and an indication of their area of interest within textual criticism. Non-members who wish to comment are not expected to be evangelical, but they are requested to respect the blog's ethos.
2 Comments:
I think it depends on the complexity of your stemma.
If it's simple enough, you can use a standard drawing package like Paint or Draw. Even Powerpoint (though not technically "free").
If the stemma is more involved but there is no mixture or contamination (e.g., for Spencer et al. on TC some years ago), you can use various cladistics programs, many of which are free.
You can also ask Peter Robinson or his team (who produced STEMMA) for what they use.
Talking of Peter Robinson and STEMMA, I looked on the web-page below with affiliations to Robinson and his associates, including D.C. Parker and Barbara Bordalejo. I did not find any information on particular software here but there are surely many useful things here for the "stemma-interested"
http://www.textualscholarship.org
/stemmatics/index.html
Apparently, Bordalejo has her own blog at: http://www.textualscholarship.org/blog/
Unfortunately, however, there is not much activity there.
Post a Comment