The latest issue of Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (31.3) has a special section of stemmatics. I would particularly recommend the essays by Barbara Bordalejo and Peter Robinson which were mentioned on the blog here. All of these appear to be freely available for the time being. But I don’t think that will last. Here’s the list of essays:
Thematic Section on Studia Stemmatologica
- Thematic Section on Studia Stemmatologica
Tuomas Heikkilä, Teemu Roos - Analysis of variation significance in artificial traditions using Stemmaweb
Tara L. Andrews - Lines of succession in an English ballad tradition: The publishing history and textual descent of The Wandering Jew’s Chronicle
Giles Bergel, Christopher J. Howe, Heather F. Windram - The genealogy of texts: Manuscript traditions and textual traditions
Barbara Bordalejo - Computer-assisted stemmatology in studying Paulus Juusten’s 16th-century chronicle Catalogus et ordinaria successio Episcoporum Finlandensium
Marko Halonen - The silva portentosa of stemmatology: Bifurcation in the recension of Old Norse manuscripts
Odd Einar Haugen - Oral fairy tale or literary fake? Investigating the origins of Little Red Riding Hood using phylogenetic network analysis
Jamshid Tehrani, Quan Nguyen, Teemu Roos - Four rules for the application of phylogenetics in the analysis of textual traditions
Peter Robinson - Open versus closed recensions (Pasquali): Pros and cons of some methods for computer-assisted stemmatology
Marina Buzzoni, Eugenio Burgio, Martina Modena, Samuela Simion
Looks like nice light holiday reading.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy your light holiday! may these articles help you on your way...
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