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The Digital Victorian Periodical Poetry (DVPP) project is a SSHRC-funded digital humanities project based at the University of Victoria. With the guidance of principal investigator Dr. Alison Chapman, the DVPP team is creating a digital index of British periodical poetry from the long nineteenth century. In addition to uncovering periodical poems, writing descriptive metadata, and compiling prosopographical research, we are currently using TEI and CSS to encode a statistically- representative sample of indexed poems, looking for quantitative evidence of literary change over time. Such an endeavour requires a large, robust dataset covering a range of periodicals throughout the period. At the time of writing, there are more than 13,000 poems in the database, and we expect that total to reach 20,000. Of these, around 2,000 will be encoded, focusing on the decade years (1820, 1830, 1840, and so on). Journal of the Text Encoding Initiative, 1How we tripled our encoding speed in the Digital Victorian Periodical Project In this presentation, we will showcase the various strategies and tools we have used to speed up our encoding process. We combine simple tricks like keyboard shortcuts with more sophisticated processes to minimize drudgery and increase accuracy. Among the more interesting techniques are: • Auto-tagging of a complete poem in lines and linegroups using a Schematron QuickFix; • Use of advanced CSS selectors in the rendition/@selector attribute to reduce encoding clutter in the poem itself; • A keyboard shortcut to tag rhymes which detects whether the tagged text is a masculine or feminine rhyme and provides the appropriate attribute value; • Auto-detection of cases where a new line-end rhymes with a previously-encoded rhyme, and should, therefore, be labelled to match it, leveraging our growing dataset of nearly 30,000 rhymes; • Instant access to to a rendering of the poem which provides a visualization of the rhyme structure, auto-detection of anaphora, epistrophe and other refrain-like forms, and other diagnostic feedback.
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