The Tesserae Project: intertextual analysis of Latin poetry. Coffee, N., Koenig, J., Poornima, S., Forstall, C. W., Ossewaarde, R., & Jacobson, S. L. Literary and Linguistic Computing, 28(2):221–228, June, 2013.
The Tesserae Project: intertextual analysis of Latin poetry [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Tesserae is a web-based tool for automatically detecting allusions in Latin poetry. Although still in the start-up phase, it already is capable of identifying significant numbers of known allusions, as well as similar numbers of allusions previously unnoticed by scholars. In this article, we use the tool to examine allusions to Vergil’s Aeneid in the first book of Lucan’s Civil War. Approximately 3,000 linguistic parallels returned by the program were compared with a list of known allusions drawn from commentaries. Each was examined individually and graded for its literary significance, in order to benchmark the program’s performance. All allusions from the program and commentaries were then pooled in order to examine broad patterns in Lucan’s allusive techniques which were largely unapproachable without digital methods. Although Lucan draws relatively constantly from Vergil’s generic language in order to maintain the epic idiom, this baseline is punctuated by clusters of pointed allusions, in which Lucan frequently subverts Vergil’s original meaning. These clusters not only attend the most significant characters and events but also play a role in structuring scene transitions. Work is under way to incorporate the ability to match on word meaning, phrase context, as well as metrical and phonological features into future versions of the program.
@article{coffee_tesserae_2013,
	title = {The {Tesserae} {Project}: intertextual analysis of {Latin} poetry},
	volume = {28},
	issn = {0268-1145, 1477-4615},
	shorttitle = {The {Tesserae} {Project}},
	url = {https://academic.oup.com/dsh/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/llc/fqs033},
	doi = {10.1093/llc/fqs033},
	abstract = {Tesserae is a web-based tool for automatically detecting allusions in Latin poetry. Although still in the start-up phase, it already is capable of identifying significant numbers of known allusions, as well as similar numbers of allusions previously unnoticed by scholars. In this article, we use the tool to examine allusions to Vergil’s Aeneid in the first book of Lucan’s Civil War. Approximately 3,000 linguistic parallels returned by the program were compared with a list of known allusions drawn from commentaries. Each was examined individually and graded for its literary significance, in order to benchmark the program’s performance. All allusions from the program and commentaries were then pooled in order to examine broad patterns in Lucan’s allusive techniques which were largely unapproachable without digital methods. Although Lucan draws relatively constantly from Vergil’s generic language in order to maintain the epic idiom, this baseline is punctuated by clusters of pointed allusions, in which Lucan frequently subverts Vergil’s original meaning. These clusters not only attend the most significant characters and events but also play a role in structuring scene transitions. Work is under way to incorporate the ability to match on word meaning, phrase context, as well as metrical and phonological features into future versions of the program.},
	language = {en},
	number = {2},
	urldate = {2023-08-26},
	journal = {Literary and Linguistic Computing},
	author = {Coffee, N. and Koenig, J.-P. and Poornima, S. and Forstall, C. W. and Ossewaarde, R. and Jacobson, S. L.},
	month = jun,
	year = {2013},
	pages = {221--228},
}

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