[RNLD] current work on digital data-based ling descriptions?
Luke Gessler
lukegessler at gmail.com
Sat Dec 2 19:55:49 UTC 2017
Hi,
Including citations in glosses (as I see Thieberger did in his grammar) is
a great idea. I'm curious, would you mind sharing some of the websites
you've seen that attempt to do this?
You say you're looking for alternatives to websites, but if a grammar were
prepared as a web document, it would be possible to hyperlink from the
gloss in the description to the primary data, whether it's a written text,
an audio recording, or something else. That seems pretty ideal, right?
I think your concern might be that websites are often fragile and ephemeral
(they definitely often are), but this isn't endemic to the medium. It is
possible to use a website as a front end to a proper archive. One example
that comes to mind is Lise Dobrin's Arapesh Grammar and Digital Language
Archive <https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/nbpzB5SV74zKt0?domain=arapesh.org>, which has been around since 2006 and is
maintained by a technical organization at her university
<https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/1RkEBaHRoMXzuZ?domain=iath.virginia.edu>.
Was that the limitation you saw in websites, or are there others you see?
Regards,
Luke Gessler
On Sat, Dec 2, 2017 at 11:12 AM, Jorge Emilio Rosés Labrada <jrosesla at uwo.ca
> wrote:
> Hi Joseph,
>
> There's an excellent LD&C Special Publications volume edited by Sebastian
> Nordhoff (available here: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/V810B2SY94KgSe?domain=nflrc.hawaii.edu
> <https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/V810B2SY94KgSe?domain=nflrc.hawaii.edu>)
> that might be of interest.
>
> Best,
> Jorge
>
> -------------
> Jorge Emilio Rosés Labrada
> Assistant Professor, Indigenous Language Sustainability
> Department of Linguistics
> University of Alberta
> Tel: (+1) 780-492-5698 <(780)%20492-5698>
> jrosesla at ualberta.ca
>
> *The University of Alberta acknowledges that we are located on Treaty 6
> territory, **and respects the history, languages, and cultures of the
> First Nations, Métis, Inuit, **and all First Peoples of Canada, whose
> presence continues to enrich our institution.*
>
> On Sat, Dec 2, 2017 at 9:36 AM, Joseph Brooks <
> josephdbrooks at umail.ucsb.edu> wrote:
>
>> Hi everyone,
>> I'm wondering if anyone out there is working on (or perhaps like me "very
>> interested in but lacking the tech-know how") creating digital linguistic
>> descriptions that link directly to the primary data, perhaps even in new
>> and creative ways (esp including audiovisual data)? Thinking along the
>> lines here of something inspired from a combination of Thieberger's South
>> Efate grammar and 2009 paper + Berez(-Kroeker) Gawne & Kelly's (among
>> others) recent work emphasizing data citation and resolvability in
>> linguistics.
>>
>> I know that some grammars have gone as far as including CDs and that
>> there are also websites devoted to this sort of endeavor, but I'm mostly
>> trying to find out about alternatives to those, eg the type of thing one
>> could archive and have openly accessible.
>>
>> Thanks!
>> Joseph
>>
>>
>
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