Re: Corpora: "must have" lists

From: Graeme Kennedy (graeme.kennedy@vuw.ac.nz)
Date: Tue Jun 19 2001 - 23:16:52 MET DST

  • Next message: Lou Burnard: "Re: Corpora: Using SARA to query other corpora than the BNC"

    Geoff,
    I hope you and Anne will follow up with a publisher your idea of a reader.
    As regards the initial choice you mentioned for your list, I think the
    article you may be referring to was by Leech and Fallon in the ICAME
    Journal, 1992,16, 29 - 50. ("Computer Corpora - What do they tell us about
    culture.") I always get my MA classes to read it and it is always a hit.
    With best wishes,
    Graeme

    At 17:10 19/06/2001 +0100, Geoffrey Sampson wrote:
    >
    >Lou suggests organizing a "reader" of classic articles in corpus linguistics
    >as an electronic corpus. Hmm ...
    >
    >I feel a bit sceptical about that for two reasons. One is that I doubt that
    >the primary purpose (of helping newcomers "read themselves in" to the field)
    >would be achieved well by an electronic corpus of articles -- people like
    >reading off paper bound into journals and books, not off the screen -- and
    >publishers would be less enthusiastic about publishing a collection
    >(and copyright permissions might be harder to get) if the material were also
    >being made available electronically. (I know there are exceptions, such
    >as the _State of the Art in Human Lg Technologies_ book available both on
    >the Web and from CUP -- but I think they will always be exceptions rather
    >than the norm.)
    >
    >Also, I am not sure that Lou's second purpose, of providing a source from
    >which one could monitor the development of terms of art in the field, would
    >really be achieved all that well by a collection of the N classic readings
    >in the history of corpus ling. Lou knows a lot more about lexicography
    >than I do, but it seems to me that the limited number of items one would
    >most want to encourage newcomers to read would not necessarily coincide with
    >the texts that best exemplified the development of terminology -- for that,
    >would a larger bulk of less-exciting items not be more informative?
    >
    >But I certainly agree with Lou that it would be interesting to see how far
    >people's "must have" lists coincided. Since the note of mine to which
    >Lou is responding, Anne Wichmann and I have discussed whether we might
    >actually propose a collection like this to a publisher -- I'm not sure
    >whether either of us is yet clear that we want to commit ourselves to the
    >effort, but we are clear that one desirable thing would be to use the
    >Corpora List to get people to propose their personal Top N lists. I had
    >thought we would probably wait till we actually got to the stage of
    >putting a synopsis in front of a publisher, if we ever do -- but I suppose
    >since Lou has raised the idea, people might want to have fun over the
    >summer putting together such lists! Mine would include
    >the article from _ICAME News_ by ??Stig Johansson and Geoff Leech?? about
    >significant vocabulary differences between British and American English,
    >and the one from a book edited by Nelleke Oostdijk, by ?Ken
    >Church and Bill Gale?, "What is wrong with adding one?" -- but I haven't
    >started seriously working out a proper list.
    >
    >Geoff
    >
    >
    >G.R. Sampson, Professor of Natural Language Computing
    >
    >School of Cognitive & Computing Sciences
    >University of Sussex
    >Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QH, GB
    >
    >e-mail geoffs@cogs.susx.ac.uk
    >tel. +44 1273 678525
    >fax +44 1273 671320
    >web http://www.grsampson.net
    >

    ----------
    Graeme D. Kennedy
    Professor of Applied Linguistics
    School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies
    Victoria University of Wellington
    P O Box 600
    Wellington, NEW ZEALAND
    Phone: (64) (04) 4635627or (64) (04) 4721000 ext. 5627
    Fax: (64) (04) 4635604
    email: graeme.kennedy@vuw.ac.nz



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