A Bibliography of Publications related to the Text Encoding Initiative


Reading list

The following lists of readings in markup theory and the TEI derive from work originally prepared by Susan Schreibman and Kevin Hawkins for the TEI Education Special Interest Group, recoded in TEI P5 by Sabine Krott and Eva Radermacher. They should be regarded only as a snapshot of work in progress, to which further contributions and corrections are welcomed.

Theory of Markup and XML

  1. C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen and Claus Huitfeld. "Concurrent Document Hierarchies in MECS and SGML." Literary and Linguistic Computing 14.1 (1999): 29-42.
  2. C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen. "Rabbit/duck grammars: a validation method for overlapping structures." Proceedings of Extreme Markup Languages 2006. 2006. <http://www.idealliance.org/papers/extreme/proceedings/html/2006/SperbergMcQueen01/EML2006SperbergMcQueen01.html>.
  3. David T. Barnard, Lou Burnard, Jean-Pierre Gaspart, Lynne A. Price, C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen, and Giovanni Battista Varile. "Hierarchical Encoding of Text: Technical Problems and SGML Solutions." Computers and the Humanities 29.3 (1995): 211–231. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01830617>. <http://www.tei-c.org/Vault/ML/mlw18.ps>.
  4. David T. Barnard, Lou Burnard, and C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen. "Lessons learned from using SGML in the Text Encoding Initiative." Computer Standards & Interfaces 18.1 (1996): 3–10. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0920-5489(95)00035-6>.
  5. Lou Burnard. "What is SGML and how does it help?." Daniel Greenstein (ed.) Modelling Historical Data: Towards a Standard for Encoding and Exchanging Machine-readable Texts. St Katherinen: Max-Planck-Institut für Geschichte In Kommission bei Scripta Mercaturae Verlag, 1991. 81–91. <http://www.tei-c.org/Vault/ED/EDW25/>. [Revised version published as Burnard 1995a]
  6. Lou Burnard. "SGML on the Web: Too Little Too Soon or Too Much Too Late?." Computers & Texts 15 (1995): 12–15. <http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/Belux/>.
  7. Lou Burnard. "What is SGML and How Does It Help?." Computers and the Humanities 29.1 (1995): 41–50. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01830315>. <http://xml.coverpages.org/burnardw25-index.html>. [Reprinted in Ide 1995b, pp. 41-50]
  8. Nancy Ide and Jean Veronis (eds.) The Text Encoding Initiative: Background and Contexts. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publisher, 1995.
  9. Lou Burnard. Is Humanities Computing an Academic Discipline? or, Why Humanities Computing Matters. 1999. <http://www.iath.virginia.edu/hcs/burnard.html>. <http://www.iath.virginia.edu/hcs/>. [Presented at an interdisciplinary seminar at the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, University of Virginia, November 1999.]
  10. Lou Burnard. "Using SGML for Linguistic Analysis: The Case of the BNC." Markup Languages Theory and Practice 2 (1999): 31–51. <http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/papers/sgml96.sgm>. [Also published in Moser 2001a, pp. 53–72]
  11. Stephan Moser, Peter Stahl, Werner Wegstein, and Norbert Richard Wolf (eds.) Maschinelle Verarbeitung Altdeutscher Texte V (Beiträge zum Fünften Internationalen Symposion, Würzburg, 4–6 März 1997). Tübingen: Niemeyer, 2001.
  12. Lou Burnard, Elizabeth Lalou, and Peter Robinson. "Vers un Standard Européen de Description des Manuscrits: Le Projet Master." Documents Numeriques Les Documents Anciens 3.1–2 (1999): 151-169.
  13. Lou Burnard. XML: The Dream and the Reality. 1999. <http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/papers/euro99.xml>. [Closing plenary address at the XML Europe Conference, Granada, May 1999]
  14. Lou Burnard, Claudia Claridge, Josef Schmied, and Rainer Siemund. "Encoding the Lampeter Corpus." DRH98: Selected Papers from Digital Resources for the Humanities. London: Office for Humanities Communication, 2000. <http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/papers/glasgie.xml>.
  15. Lou Burnard. From Two Cultures to Digital Culture: The Rise of the Digital Demotic. 2000. <http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/wip/twocults.html>. [Presented at CLIP, Alicante][ Published in Italian as Burnard 2001a ]
  16. Lou Burnard. "Dalle «Due Culture» Alla Cultura Digitale: La Nascita del Demotico Digitale." Il Verri Nella Rete 16 (2001): 9–22.
  17. Lou Burnard. "On the Hermeneutic Implications of Text Encoding." Domenico Fiormonte and Jonathan Usher (eds.) New Media and the Humanities: Research and Applications. Oxford: Humanities Computing Unit, 2001. 31–38. <http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/wip/herman.htm>.
  18. Lou Burnard. "Encoding Standards for the Electronic Edition." Matija Ogrin (ed.) Znanstvene Izdaje in Elektronski Medij Scholarly Editions and the Digital Medium. Ljubljana: Studia Litteraria ZRC ZAZU, 2005. 12–67. <http://nl.ijs.si/e-zrc/bib/eziss-Burnard.pdf>.
  19. Lou Burnard. "Metadata for corpus work." Martin Wynne (ed.) Developing Linguistic Corpora: A Guide to Good Practice. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2005. 30–46. <http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/wip/metadata.html>.
  20. Lou Burnard, Katherine O'Brien O'Keefe, and John Unsworth (eds.) Electronic Textual Editing. New York: Modern Languages Association, 2006. <http://www.tei-c.org/Activities/ETE/>.
  21. Dino Buzzetti. "Digital Representation and the Text Model." New Literary History 33.1 (2002): 61–88. <http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/new_literary_history/v033/33.1buzzetti.html>.
  22. Paul Caton. "Markup's Current Imbalance." Markup Languages: Theory and Practice 3.1 (2001): 1–13. [This paper was proceeded by reports at the Joint Annual Conference of the Association for Computers and the Humanities and the Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing in 1999 (Charlottesville, Virginia) and Extreme Markup Languages 2000 (Montreal, Canada)]
  23. Ruey-Shun Chen and Shien-Chiang Yu. "Developing an XML Framework for Metadata System." Proceedings of the 1st International Symposium on Information and Communication Technologies. Dublin: 2003. 267–272. <http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=963653>. [This paper was presented in a session entitled "Electronic Document Technology."]
  24. James H. Coombs. Information Management System for Scholars. Providence: Brown Computer Center, 1986. Technical Memorandum TM 69–2
  25. James H. Coombs, Allen Renear, and Steven J. DeRose. "Markup Systems and The Future of Scholarly Text Processing." Communications of the ACM 30.11 (1987): 933–947. <http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/32206.32209>. <http://xml.coverpages.org/coombs-hallgren.html>. <http://xml.coverpages.org/coombs.html>. [Reprinted with new commentary in Landow 1993a, pp 85–118]
  26. George P. Landow and Paul Delany (eds.) The Digital Word: Text-based Computing in the Humanities. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1993.
  27. Robin Cover. Markup Languages and (Non-) Hierarchies. 2005. <http://xml.coverpages.org/hierarchies.html>. [Technology report from the Cover Pages]
  28. Steven J. DeRose. Structured Information: Navigation, Access, and Control. 1995. <http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/FindingAids/EAD/derose.html>. [Paper presented at the Berkeley Finding Aid Conference, April 4–6, 1995]
  29. Steven J. DeRose, David G. Durand, Elli Mylonas, and Allen H. Renear. "What is Text, Really?." Journal of Computing in Higher Education 1.2 (1990): 3–26. [Republished (DeRose 1997a) as a "classic reprint" with invited commentary and authors' replies in the ACM/SIGDOC]
  30. Steven J. DeRose, David G. Durand, Elli Mylonas, and Allen H. Renear. "What is Text, Really?." Journal of Computer Documentation 21.3 (1997): 1–24. <http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/264842.264843>.
  31. Charles F. Goldfarb. "A Generalized Approach to Document Markup.." Proceedings of the ACM SIGPLAN SIGOA Symposium on Text Manipulation. New York: ACM, 1981. <http://www.nyct.net/~aray/notes/igm.html>. [Adapted as "Annex A. Introduction to Generalized Markup" in ISO 8879]
  32. Tony Graham. "Unicode: What Is It and How Do I Use It?." Markup Languages: Theory & Practice 1.4 (1999): 75.
  33. Susan Hockey. "Creating and Using Electronic Editions." Richard J. Finneran (ed.) The Literary Text in the Digital Age. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1996. 1–22.
  34. Susan Hockey, Allen Renear, and Jerome J. McGann. What is Text? A Debate on the Philosophical and Epistemological Nature of Text in the Light of Humanities Computing Research. 1999. <http://www.iath.virginia.edu/ach-allc.99/proceedings/hockey-renear2.html>. [Panel presented at ACH/ALLC 1999]
  35. Susan Hockey. Electronic Texts in the Humanities. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2000.
  36. Claus Huitfeldt. "Multi-dimensional Texts in a One-dimensional Medium." Computers and the Humanities 28.4/5 (1994): 235–241. <http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1007/BF01830270>.
  37. Claus Huitfeldt. "Toward a Machine-Readable Version of Wittgenstein's Nachlaß: Some Editorial Problems." Hans Gerhard Senger (ed.) Philosophische Editionen. Erwartungen an sie – Wirkungen durch sie. Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag, 1994. 37–43.
  38. Leslie Lamport. "Document Production: Visual or Logical?." Notices of the American Mathematical Society 34 (1987): 621–624. <http://research.microsoft.com/users/lamport/pubs/pubs.html#document-production>. [Republished as Lamport 1988a]
  39. Leslie Lamport. "Document Production: Visual or Logical?." TUGboat 9.1 (1988): 8-10. <http://www.tug.org/TUGboat/Articles/tb09-1/tb20lamport.pdf>.
  40. John Lavagnino. "Completeness and Adequacy in Text Encoding." Richard J. Finneran (ed.) The Literary Text in the Digital Age. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1996. 63–76.
  41. Charles Lightfoot. Generic Textual Element Identification—A Primer. Arlington: Graphic Communications Computer Association, 1979.
  42. Joshua Lubell. "Structured Markup on the Web: A Tale of Two Sites." Markup Languages: Theory & Practice 1.3 (1999): 7–22. <http://www.mel.nist.gov/msidlibrary/doc/mlang/markuplang.htm>.
  43. Tony McEnery, Lou Burnard, Andrew Wilson, and Paul Baker. Validation of Linguistic Corpora. 1998. <http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/wip/ELRA/WP3/>. [Report commissioned by ELRA]
  44. Jerome McGann. "The Rationale of Hypertext." Kathryn Sutherland (ed.) Electronic Text: Investigations in Method and Theory. New York, NY: Clarendon Press Oxford, 1997. 19–46.
  45. Jerome McGann. Radiant Textuality: Literature After the World Wide Web. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillian, 2001.
  46. Jerome McGann. "Marking Texts of Many Dimensions." Susan Schreibman, Ray Siemens, and John Unsworth (eds.) A Companion to Digital Humanities. Oxford: Blackwell, 2004. 198–217. <http://www.digitalhumanities.org/companion/>.
  47. Alan Morrison, Michael Popham, and Karen Wikander. Creating and Documenting Electronic Texts: A Guide to Good Practice. (no date). <http://ota.ahds.ac.uk/documents/creating/>.
  48. Alois Pichler. "Advantages of a Machine-Readable Version of Wittgenstein's Nachlaß." Kjell S. Johannessen and Tore Nordenstam (eds.) Culture and Value: Philosophy and the Cultural Sciences. Beiträge des 18. Internationalen Wittgenstein Symposiums 13–20. August 1995 Kirchberg am Wechsel. Kirchberg am Wechsel: Die Österreichische Ludwig Wittgenstein Gesellschaft, 1995. 770–776. <http://hdl.handle.net/1956/1875>.
  49. Wendell Piez. "Beyond the 'Descriptive vs. Procedural' Distinction." B. Tommie Usdin and Steven R. Newcomb (eds.) Proceedings of Extreme Markup Languages 2001: Montreal, Canada. 2001. <http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/Proceedings/html/2001/Piez01/EML2001Piez01.html>. <http://www.idealliance.org/papers/extreme/proceedings/html/2001/Piez01/EML2001Piez01.html>.
  50. Michael Popham. "What Is Markup and Why Does It Matter." Michael Popham and Lorna Hughes (eds.) Computers and Teaching in the Humanities: Selected Papers from the CATH94 Conference held in Glasgow University September 9th-12th 1994. Oxford: CTI Centre for Textual Studies, 1996.
  51. Liam Quin. "Suggestive Markup: Explicit Relationships in Descriptive and Prescriptive DTDs." B. Tommie Usdin and Deborah A. Lapeyre (eds.) SGML'96 Conference Proceedings. Alexandria, VA: Graphic Communications Association, 1996. 405–418. <http://www.holoweb.net/~liam/papers/1996-sgml96-SuggestiveMarkup/>.
  52. Darrell Raymond, Frank Tompa, and Derick Wood. "From Data Representation to Data Model: Meta-Semantic Issues in the Evolution of SGML." Computer Standards & Interfaces 18.1 (1996): 25–36. <http://www.cs.uwaterloo.ca/~fwtompa/.papers/sgml.ps>. <http://hdl.handle.net/1783.1/41>. <http://xml.coverpages.org/raymmeta.ps>.
  53. Allen Renear, David Durand, and Elli Mylonas. "Refining our Notion of What Text Really Is: The Problem of Overlapping Hierarchies." Susan Hockey and Nancy Ide (eds.) Research in Humanities Computing 4: Selected Papers from the 1992 ALLC/ACH Conference. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996. 263–280. <http://www.stg.brown.edu/resources/stg/monographs/ohco.html>.
  54. Allen Renear. "Out of Praxis: Three (Meta)Theories of Textuality." Kathryn Sutherland (ed.) Electronic Text: Investigations in Method and Theory. New York, NY: Clarendon Press Oxford, 1997. 107–126.
  55. Allen Renear. "The Descriptive/Procedural Distinction is Flawed." Markup Languages: Theory and Practice 2.4 (2000): 411–420.
  56. Allen H. Renear, David Dubin, and C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen. "Towards a Semantics for XML Markup." Richard Furuta, Jonathan I. Maletic, and Ethan V. Munson (eds.) Proceedings of the 2002 ACM Symposium on Document Engineering. McLean, VA: Association for Computing Machinery, 2002. 119–126. <http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/585058.585081>.
  57. Allen H. Renear, Christopher Phillippe, Pat Lawton, and David Dubin. "An XML Document Corresponds to Which FRBR Group 1 Entity?." B. Tommie Usdin and Steven R. Newcomb (eds.) Proceedings of Extreme Markup Languages 2003: Montreal, Canada. 2003. <http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/Proceedings/html/2003/Lawton01/EML2003Lawton01.html>. <http://www.idealliance.org/papers/extreme/proceedings/html/2003/Lawton01/EML2003Lawton01.html>.
  58. Allen H. Renear, David Dubin, C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen, and Claus Huitfeldt. "XML Semantics and Digital Libraries." Proceedings of the 3rd ACM/IEEE–CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries. Los Alamitos, CA: IEEE Computer Society, 2003. 303–305. <http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=827192>.
  59. Allen H. Renear. "Text Encoding." Susan Schreibman, Ray Siemans, and John Unsworth (eds.) A Companion to Digital Humanities. Oxford: Blackwell, 2004. 218–239. <http://www.digitalhumanities.org/companion/>.
  60. Susanne Salmon-Alt. "Data Structures for Etymology: Towards an Etymological Lexical Network." BULAG: revue internationale annuelle Numéro Etymologie 31 (2006): . <http://www.atilf.fr/perso/salmon-alt/telechargement/Bulag_2006.pdf>.
  61. Susan Schreibman. "Computer-mediated Texts and Textuality: Theory and Practice." Computers and the Humanities 36.3 (2002): 283–293. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1016178200469>.
  62. Susan Schreibman. "The Text Ported." Literary and Linguistic Computing 17.1 (2002): 77–87. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/llc/17.1.77>.
  63. SGML Users' Group. A Brief History of the Development of SGML. 1990. <http://www.sgmlsource.com/history/sgmlhist.htm>.
  64. Frank M. Shipman and Catherine C. Marshall. "Formality Considered Harmful: Experiences, Emerging Themes, and Directions on the Use of Formal Representations in Interactive Systems." Computer-Supported Cooperative Work 8.4 (1999): 333–352. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1008716330212>. <http://www.csdl.tamu.edu/~shipman/papers/cscw.pdf>.
  65. C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen and Claus Huitfeldt. "Concurrent document hierarchies in MECS and SGML." Literary and Linguistic Computing 14.1 (1999): 29–42. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/llc/14.1.29>.
  66. C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen, Claus Huitfeldt, and Allen H. Renear. "Meaning and Interpretation in Markup." Markup Languages: Theory and Practice 2.3 (2000): 215–234.
  67. C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen, David Dubin, Claus Huitfeldt, and Allen Renear. "Drawing Inferences on the Basis of Markup." B. Tommie Usdin and Steven R. Newcomb (eds.) Proceedings of Extreme Markup Languages 2002: Montreal, Canada. 2002. <http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/Proceedings/html/2002/CMSMcQ01/EML2002CMSMcQ01.html>. <http://www.idealliance.org/papers/extreme/proceedings/html/2002/CMSMcQ01/EML2002CMSMcQ01.html>.
  68. Suzana Sukovic. "Beyond the Scriptorium: The Role of the Library in Text Encoding." D-Lib 8.1 (2002): . <http://www.dlib.org/dlib/january02/sukovic/01sukovic.html>.
  69. University of Nebraska – Lincoln Libraries. A Basic Guide to Text Encoding. 2003. <http://libr.unl.edu:2000/guide_site/teien.html>.
  70. John Unsworth. Knowledge Representation in Humanities Computing. 2001. <http://www3.isrl.uiuc.edu/~unsworth/KR/>. [Lecture I in the eHumanities NEH Lecture Series on Technology & the Humanities, Washington, DC, April 3, 2001]
  71. John Unsworth. Scholarly Primitives: What Methods Do Humanities Researchers Have in Common, How Might Our Tools Reflect This?. 2000. <http://www3.isrl.uiuc.edu/~unsworth/Kings.5-00/primitives.html>. [ Part of a Symposium on "Humanities Computing: Formal Methods, Experimental Practice" sponsored by King's College, London]
  72. John Unsworth, Katherine O'BrienO'Keeffe, and Lou Burnard (eds.) Electronic Textual Editing. TEI Consortium, 2004. <http://www.tei-c.org/Activities/ETE/>.
  73. Fabio Vitali, Luca Bompani, and Paolo Ciancarini. "Hypertext Functionalities with XML." Markup Languages: Theory & Practice 2.4 (2000): 389.
  74. Dennis G. Watson. Brief History of Document Markup. 1992. <http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/BODY_AE038>. [Circular 1086. Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida]
  75. Adriaan Weel. "The Concept of Markup." Digital Text and the Gutenberg Heritage. (no date). <http://www.let.leidenuniv.nl/wgbw/~adriaan/Gut/Ch03_Concept_of_markup.fn.pdf>. [in preparation; draft only]
  76. Christopher Welty and Nancy Ide. "Using the Right Tools: Enhancing Retrieval from Marked-up Documents." Computers and the Humanities 33.1–2 (1999): 59–84. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1001800717376>. <http://www.cs.vassar.edu/faculty/welty/papers/CHUM-99.pdf>.

Practice of Markup and XML

  1. Peter Flynn. "If XML is so easy, how come it’s so hard?." "The usability of editing software for structured documents." Proceedings of Extreme Markup Languages 2006. 2006. <http://www.idealliance.org/papers/extreme/proceedings/html/2006/Flynn01/EML2006Flynn01.html>. <http://epu.ucc.ie/articles/extreme06>.

TEI

  1. Syd Bauman. "Keying NAMEs: the WWP Approach." Brown University Women Writers Project Newsletter 2.3 (1996): 3–6. <http://www.wwp.brown.edu/project/newsletter/vol02num03/nameKey-home.html>.
  2. Syd Bauman and Julia Flanders. "Odd Customizations." Proceedings of Extreme Markup Languages 2004. 2004. <http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/Proceedings/html/2004/Bauman01/EML2004Bauman01.html>. <http://www.idealliance.org/papers/extreme/proceedings/html/2004/Bauman01/EML2004Bauman01.html>.
  3. Syd Bauman. "Tables of Contents TEI-style." Lou Burnard (ed.) TEXT Technology: The Journal of Computer Text Processing Electronic Texts and the Text Encoding Initiative. A Special Issue of TEXT Technology 5.3 (1995): 235–247.
  4. Syd Bauman and Terry Catapano. "TEI and the Encoding of the Physical Structure of Books." Computers and the Humanities 33.1–2 (1999): 113–127. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1001769103586>.
  5. Syd Bauman. "TEI HORSEing Around." Proceedings of the Extreme Markup Languages 2005. 2005. <http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/Proceedings/html/2005/Bauman01/EML2005Bauman01.html>. <http://www.idealliance.org/papers/extreme/proceedings/html/2005/Bauman01/EML2005Bauman01.html>.
  6. Malcolm B. Brown. "What is the TEI?." Information Technology and Libraries 13.1 (1994): 8.
  7. Lou Burnard. "The Text Encoding Initiative: A Progress Report." Gerhard Leitner (ed.) New Directions in Corpus Linguistics. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 1992.
  8. Lou Burnard. "Rolling your own with the TEI." Information Services and Use 13.2 (1993): 141–154.
  9. Lou Burnard. "The TEI: Towards an Extensible Standard for the Encoding of Texts." Seamus Ross and Edward Higgs (eds.) Electronic Information Resources and Historians. London: British Academy, 1994.
  10. Lou Burnard. "The Text Encoding Initiative: An Overview." Geoffrey Leech, Greg Myers, and Jenny Thomas (eds.) Spoken English on Computer: Transcription, Mark-up and Application. London: Longman, 1995.
  11. Lou Burnard. The Text Encoding Initiative's Recommendations for the Encoding of Language Corpora: Theory and Practice. 1997. <http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lou/wip/Soria/>. [Prepared for a seminar on Etiquetación y extracción de información de grandes corpus textuales within the Curso Industrias de la Lengua (14–18 de Julio de 1997). Sponsored by the Fundacion Duques de Soria.]
  12. Lou Burnard and Michael Popham. "Putting Our Headers Together: A Report on the TEI Header Meeting 12 September 1997.." Computers and the Humanities 33.1-2 (1999): 39–47. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1001710828622>.
  13. <http://www.tei-c.org/Consortium/consortium.html>.
  14. Lou Burnard. Text Encoding for Interchange: A New Consortium. 2000. <http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue24/tei/>.
  15. Fabio Ciotti (ed.) Il Manuale TEI Lite: Introduzione Alla Codifica Elettronica Dei Testi Letterari. Milano: Sylvestre Bonnard, 2005.
  16. Sheau-Hwang Chang. "The Implications of TEI." OCLC Systems and Services 17.3 (2001): 101–103.
  17. Mavis Cournane. The Application of SGML/TEI to the Processing of Complex, Multi-lingual Text. Cork, Ireland: University College Cork, 1997.
  18. Digital Library Federation. TEI and XML in Digital Libraries: Meeting June 30 and July 1, 1998, Library of Congress, Summary/Proceedings. 1998. <http://www.umdl.umich.edu/workshops/teidlf/>.
  19. Digital Library Federation. TEI Text Encoding in Libraries: Guidelines for Best Encoding Practices Version 2.1 (March 27, 2006). 2007. <http://www.diglib.org/standards/tei.htm>.
  20. Timothy J. Finney. "Manuscript Markup." Larry W. Hurtado (ed.) The Freer Biblical Manuscripts: Fresh Studies of an American Treasure Trove. Atlanta, GA: Society of Biblical Literature, 2006. 263-288.
  21. Matthew Gibson and Christine Ruotolo. "Beyond the Web: TEI, the Digital Library, and the Ebook Revolution." Computers and the Humanities 37.1 (2003): 57–63. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1021895322291>.
  22. Sylvain Loiseau. Introduction à la TEI. (no date). <http://revue-texto.net/Corpus/Manufacture/standards/d1e284.html>.
  23. Lynn Marko and Christina Kelleher Powell. "Descriptive Metadata Strategy for TEI Headers: A University of Michigan Library Case Study." OCLC Systems & Services 17.3 (2001): 117-20. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/10650750110402585>.
  24. David Mertz. XML Matters: TEI — the Text Encoding Initiative An XML Dialect for Archival and Complex Documents. 2003. <http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/xml/library/x-matters30.html>.
  25. Alan Morrison. "Delivering Electronic Texts Over the Web: The Current and Planned Practices of the Oxford Text Archive." Computers and the Humanities 33.1-2 (1999): 193-198. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1001726011322>.
  26. Elli Mylonas and Allen Renear. "The Text Encoding Initiative at 10: Not Just an Interchange Format Anymore – But a New Research Community." Computers and the Humanities 33.1-2 (1999): 1-9. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1001832310939>.
  27. Tobin Nellhaus. "XML, TEI, Digital Libraries in the Humanities." Portal: Libraries and the Academy 1.3 (2001): 267-277. <http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/portal_libraries_and_the_academy/v001/1.3nellhaus.html>.
  28. Sebastian Rahtz. Building TEI DTDs and Schemas on demand. 2003. <http://www.idealliance.org/papers/dx_xmle03/papers/03-01-04/03-01-04.html>. [Paper presented at XML Europe 2003, London, March 2003]
  29. Sebastian Rahtz, Norman Walsh, and Lou Burnard. A unified model for text markup: TEI, Docbook, and beyond. 2004. <http://www.idealliance.org/papers/dx_xmle04/papers/03-08-01/03-08-01.html>. [Paper presented at XML Europe 2004, Amsterdam, April 2004]
  30. Allen Renear. "Theory and Metatheory in the Development of Text Encoding." Michael A. R. Biggs and Claus Huitfeldt (eds.) Philosophy and Electronic Publishing. 1995. <http://hhobel.phl.univie.ac.at/mii/pesp.html>. [Interactive seminar for the Monist]
  31. Peter Robinson. Making a Digital Edition with TEI and Anastasia. (no date). <http://www.cta.dmu.ac.uk:8000/AnaServer?teidoc+0+start.anv>.
  32. David Seaman. The Electronic Text Center Introduction to TEI and Guide to Document Preparation. 1995. <http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/tei/uvatei.html>.
  33. Gary F. Simons. "Using Architectural Forms to Map TEI Data into an Object-Oriented Database." Computers and the Humanities 33.1-2 (1999): 85-101. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1001765030032>.
  34. David Smith. "Textual Variation and Version Control in the TEI." Computers and the Humanities 33.1-2 (1999): 103-112. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1001795210724>.
  35. C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen. "Text in the Electronic Age: Textual Study and Text Encoding, with Examples from Medieval Texts." Literary & Linguistic Computing 6.1 (1991): 34-46. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/llc/6.1.34>.
  36. C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen. "The Text Encoding Initiative: Electronic Text Markup for Research." Brett Sutton (ed.) Literary Texts in an Electronic Age. Urbana-Champaign, IL: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, 1994. 35–55.
  37. C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen. "Textual Criticism and the Text Encoding Initiative." Richard J. Finneran (ed.) The Literary Text in the Digital Age. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1996. 37–62.
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