9.600 Web reviewers; masks; concordancers

Humanist (mccarty@phoenix.Princeton.EDU)
Sun, 3 Mar 1996 18:16:25 -0500 (EST)

Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 9, No. 600.
Center for Electronic Texts in the Humanities (Princeton/Rutgers)
Information at http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/

[1] From: "Michael P. Orth (Michael Orth)" (4)
<morth@cymbal.aix.calpoly.edu>
Subject: Re: 9.595 wanted: Web site reviewers

[2] From: "FIRNVX::MRGATE::\"A1::DWYERJ1\""@firnvx.firn.edu (6)
Subject: RE: 9.590 masks & masquerade in 17-19C Italy?

[3] From: Lou Burnard <lou@vax.ox.ac.uk> (6)
Subject: RE: 9.598 concordancers

--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 1 Mar 1996 15:49:11 -0800 (PST)
From: "Michael P. Orth (Michael Orth)" <morth@cymbal.aix.calpoly.edu>
Subject: Re: 9.595 wanted: Web site reviewers

I am interested in some exploration of this. You know there are many
sites already in action. For example, sf-lit@loc.gov. And much more. I
have a sf course next term in which one student task will be to discover
and report on a Web sf site. Maybe we can do a deal.

The Kraken===============end of file=================/;->?

--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 1 Mar 1996 19:05:01 -0500 (EST)
From: "FIRNVX::MRGATE::\"A1::DWYERJ1\""@firnvx.firn.edu
Subject: RE: 9.590 masks & masquerade in 17-19C Italy?

Brenda: See Terry Castle's *Masquerade and Civilization: The
Carnivalesque in Eighteenth-century English Culture and Fiction* as well as
her *The Female Thermometer: Eighteenth-century Culture and the Invention
of the Uncanny*; both are great and have fine bibliographies.See also
Eileen Ribeiro's *The Dress Worn at Masquerades in England, 1730 to 1790,
and its relation to Fancy Dress in Portraiture*. I'm writing on the
subject in relation to *Sir Charles Grandison* right now.

--[3]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 02 Mar 1996 15:48:02 +0000
From: Lou Burnard <lou@vax.ox.ac.uk>
Subject: RE: 9.598 concordancers

A quick note on concordancers...

http://info.ox.ac.uk/bnc/saradoc.html

has a slightly fuller description of SARA than any you've seen to date.
A new version is amout to be released, with many bugs fixed and some nice new
features (e.g. --gasp-- printing the results) and I'm still busily hacking my
way through writing the manual. Along with x million other things ...

L