Parallel Glosses, Shared Glosses, and Gloss Clustering: Can Network-Based Approach Help Us to Understand Organic Corpora of Glosses?

Glossing was an important element of medieval Western manuscript culture. Yet, glosses are notoriously difficult to analyze because of their philological triviality, fluid nature, heterogeneity of origin, complex transmission histories, and anonymity. Traditional scholarly approaches such as close r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of historical network research
Subtitles:"Special Issue: Networks of Manuscripts, Network of Texts"
Main Author: Steinová, Evina 1986- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Université du Luxembourg 2023
In: Journal of historical network research
Year: 2023, Volume: 9, Pages: 36-100
Further subjects:B gloss parallelism
B co-occurrence networks
B medieval Latin glossing
B Manuscript studies
B shared manuscript transmission
Online Access: Volltext (kostenfrei)
Description
Summary:Glossing was an important element of medieval Western manuscript culture. Yet, glosses are notoriously difficult to analyze because of their philological triviality, fluid nature, heterogeneity of origin, complex transmission histories, and anonymity. Traditional scholarly approaches such as close reading and genealogical method often do not produce satisfactory results, especially in the cases of gloss corpora that are highly organic, i.e., display the traits listed above to a significant degree. This article outlines a method for analyzing organic corpora of glosses based on their treatment as networks. The theoretical model for the proposed method is the co-occurrence network, a network model in which relationships between entities (nodes) are established based on sharing certain properties or constituent elements (edges). In the case of corpora of glosses, glossed manuscripts are assumed as nodes and glosses that particular manuscripts share in common constitute edges between them. Since gloss parallelism can arise through different processes, including randomness, the article describes two strategies that reduce such noise so that the transmission of glosses can be effectively examined. The method is demonstrated on a representative corpus - the early medieval glosses to the first book of the Etymologiae of Isidore of Seville.
ISSN:2535-8863
Contains:Enthalten in: Journal of historical network research