TY - JOUR
T1 - Annotation guidelines for narrative levels, time features, and subjective narration styles in fiction (SANTA 2)
AU - Kearns, Edward
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, McGill University. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - These guidelines comprise instructions for the usage of a series of markup tags that describe narrative characteristics of fiction. These tags are used to mark disruptions in narration, in the form of narrative level changes, temporal jumps, and instances of subjective narration. The tags are designed to be used in XML, as is the case in the examples in these guidelines, but they can be adapted for other platforms like CATMA. There are six tags: (for a narrative level change, an occurrence of a story within a story), (a flashback), (a flash forward in story time), (stream of consciousness), and (free indirect discourse). The guidelines first describe the narrative concepts represented by each of the tags, with reference to Genette and other narratologists. There follows some detail on how the tags should be used specifically in the encoding of texts, with examples taken from a corpus of modernist fiction. Essentially, the tags should be applied at the points in the text where the relevant instance of narrative disruption begins and ends. This allows them the encoded text to be analysed afterwards to count the frequency of the tags, and the number of words contained within a tag. In this way, the usage of the tags serves as a method for quantifying the extent of narrative disruption in works of fiction.
AB - These guidelines comprise instructions for the usage of a series of markup tags that describe narrative characteristics of fiction. These tags are used to mark disruptions in narration, in the form of narrative level changes, temporal jumps, and instances of subjective narration. The tags are designed to be used in XML, as is the case in the examples in these guidelines, but they can be adapted for other platforms like CATMA. There are six tags: (for a narrative level change, an occurrence of a story within a story), (a flashback), (a flash forward in story time), (stream of consciousness), and (free indirect discourse). The guidelines first describe the narrative concepts represented by each of the tags, with reference to Genette and other narratologists. There follows some detail on how the tags should be used specifically in the encoding of texts, with examples taken from a corpus of modernist fiction. Essentially, the tags should be applied at the points in the text where the relevant instance of narrative disruption begins and ends. This allows them the encoded text to be analysed afterwards to count the frequency of the tags, and the number of words contained within a tag. In this way, the usage of the tags serves as a method for quantifying the extent of narrative disruption in works of fiction.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85121512789
U2 - 10.22148/001c.30699
DO - 10.22148/001c.30699
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85121512789
SN - 2371-4549
VL - 6
SP - 53
EP - 68
JO - Journal of Cultural Analytics
JF - Journal of Cultural Analytics
IS - 4
ER -