site design templates

the tei-xml

for the detailed encoding of the manuscript, a total of 49 different tags, with multiple value attributes, were used. below you will find more information about the sections and the tags utilized.



<teiheader>

<fileDesc>

a file description containing a full bibliographical description of the computer file itself, from which a user of the text could derive a proper bibliographic citation, or which a librarian or archivist could use in creating a catalogue entry recording its presence within a library or archive. includes information about the source or sources from which the electronic document was derived.

<encodingDesc>

an encoding description which describes the relationship between an electronic text and its source or sources. It allows for detailed description of whether (or how) the text was normalized during transcription, how the encoder resolved ambiguities in the source, what levels of encoding or analysis were applied, and similar matters.

<profileDesc>

a text profile containing classificatory and contextual information about the text, such as its subject matter, the situation in which it was produced, the individuals described by or participating in producing it, and so forth. the text profile may however be of use in any form of automatic text processing. 

<xenoData>

a container element which allows easy inclusion of metadata from non-TEI schemes (i.e., other than elements in the TEI namespace). for example, the MARC record for the encoded document might be included using MARCXML or MODS. A simple set of metadata for harvesting might be included encoded in Dublin Core.

<revisionDesc>

a revision history which allows the encoder to provide a history of changes made during the development of the electronic text. the revision history is important for version control and for resolving questions about the history of a file. 

<teiheader>

 <teiHeader xml:lang="">


<fileDesc>


<titleStmt>


<title>


<author>


<persName>


<forename>


<surname>


<idno type="">


<extent>


<measure unit="" quantity=""/>


<publicationStmt>


<sourceDesc>


<bibl>


<relatedItem>

<ref target="">


<encodingDesc>


<profileDesc>


<langUsage>


<textClass>


<keywords source=“”>


<term>


<settingDesc>


<setting>


<name>


<time>


<xenoData>


<revisionDesc>


<change when="" who="">



<text>

<front>


element necessary if the document contains information, at a paratextual level, at the beginning of the real text (for example at the beginning you can find an index, a heading, a preface, a dedication, etc.) of which a coding is needed. Storni's manuscript contains a title page with a dedication.

<body>

contains the whole body of a single unitary text, excluding any front or back matter. the body contains lower-level text structures like paragraphs, or different structures for text genres other than prose: lines for poetry, speeches for drama. Storni's manuscript is composed of poems so the main structure behind it is the line group <lg> and the line <l>.

<text>

<text>


<front>


<titlePage>


<pb n="" facs=""/>


<titlePart type="" rend="">

</titlePart>


<body>


<div type="" n=“”>


<head rend="underline">


<lg type="stanza">


<l>

<subs>

<del type="strikethrough">

<add type="sublineal" rend="sublineal">
<unclear>
<placeName>
date when="”>

<figure>


<figDesc>


<trailer>