7.0307 As: ISO 8879 on disk; Anthro transcript (2/60)
Elaine Brennan (EDITORS@BROWNVM.BITNET)
Thu, 25 Nov 1993 16:46:35 EST
Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 7, No. 0307. Thursday, 25 Nov 1993.
(1) Date: 16 Nov 1993 10:09:42 +0000 (GMT) (21 lines)
From: Arjan Loeffen C&L/RUU <Arjan.Loeffen@let.ruu.nl>
Subject: ISO8879 in disk
(2) Date: Sun, 21 Nov 1993 17:17:07 +0000 (39 lines)
From: zeitlyn@vax.ox.ac.uk
Subject: Digitised transcript available via gopher
(1) --------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: 16 Nov 1993 10:09:42 +0000 (GMT)
From: Arjan Loeffen C&L/RUU <Arjan.Loeffen@let.ruu.nl>
Subject: ISO8879 in disk
For those interested,
I've got an electronic version of the productions in ISO8879-1986 (+ '88),
and am willing to share it. You can get them in encoded form (NOT sgml, just
ASCII with simple formatting codes), and/or in postscript (ordered by
production reference number, or by syntactic variable.
Note that it's ONLY the productions, not the complete text!
I have not found any restriction in the ISO standard on using, copying or
otherwise dissiminating the ISO standard, so I guess there's no
restriction in passing this file.
Send a mail to LOEFFEN@LET.RUU.NL (internet), subject "ISO8879 copy".
Arjan.
(2) --------------------------------------------------------------49----
Date: Sun, 21 Nov 1993 17:17:07 +0000
From: zeitlyn@vax.ox.ac.uk
Subject: Digitised transcript available via gopher
Announcement.
An electronic version of a transcript from a paper that appeared in the
anthropology journal Man earlier this year has been placed in the archives
of Yale Anthropology and is available via Gopher. This includes a
digitised version of the original sound recordings as voice annotations (in
MS Word 5.1 format for Macintosh) so the transcript can be read alongside
the original recording which is an extract of a court room dispute in a
village in Cameroon. The language spoken is Mambila, a (Niger Congo)
Mambiloid language. The purpose of doing this is to make more of my data
available. I trust that this will be of interest to linguists as well as to
anthropologists.
The file will be found in
Anthropology and Archaeology Archives at Yale University
within the directory called
Menu for Anthropological Resources.
the file is called
Digitised article from Man -- David Zeitlyn
In order to protect the copyright of the RAI (the journal publishers) only
the transcript is being made. The full reference to the article is: David
Zeitlyn, 1993. Reconstructing Kinship or the pragmatics of kin talk. Man
(n.s.) 28(2), 199-224.
David Zeitlyn
British Academy Research Fellow,
Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology,
51 Banbury Road,
Oxford,
OX2 6PF,
UK.