User:Sgcole

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[[Classics]], Susan Guettel Cole. I have been working on a long term project provisionally called Epigraphica Dionysiaca, a (growing) collection of Greek inscriptions about the Greek god Dionysos and the organization of rituals dealing with his worship. I use Epidoc, a selection of TEI tags for encoding inscriptions. This project seeks to emphasize the ritual content of the texts and to make that content easily accessible through indexes and concordances generated by TEI procedures.
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{{InfoboxMemberProfile
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|member_name = Susan Guettel Cole<br/>
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|title = Professor of Classics, emerita<br/>
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|image_link = [[Image:YOUR_IMAGE_FILENAME.jpg|center|200px|YOUR NAME]]<br/>
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|description = CAPTION FOR YOUR PHOTO<br/>
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|research_interests = Greek history and history of Greek religion<br/>
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|departmental_affiliation = Department of Classics]<br/>
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|institutional_affiliation = [http://www.buffalo.edu University at Buffalo]<br/>
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|office_location = MFAC<br/>
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|email = [mailto:sgcole@buffalo.edu sgcole@buffalo.edu]<br/>
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|URI = [YOUR STAFF PROFILE URI URI]<br/>
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|membership_status = Charter member<br/>
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|digital_projects = Epigraphica Dionysiaca<br/>
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I have been working on a long term project to collect Greek inscriptions about the Greek god Dionysos and the organization of rituals dealing with his worship. I use Epidoc, a selection of TEI tags for encoding inscriptions. This project seeks to emphasize the ritual content of the texts and to make that content easily accessible through indexes and concordances generated by TEI procedures.
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}}
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{{MemberProfile
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|name = Susan Guettel Cole
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|narrative = Background<br/>
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|narrative content = I studied Greek literature at the University of Minnesota where I took a year long seminar called "The Conflict of Religions in the Roman Empire." The breadth of the course did not prevent study in depth. My seminar project was the Samothracian mysteries, rituals that have left very scanty evidence. I began to study inscriptions in order to expand the discussion, a project that led to a dissertation and a book. In the mid-eighties I began to work seriously on the epigraphical evidence for the cult of Dionysos and assembled about 900 texts. The work demands dealing with physical objects (the stones on which the texts are inscribed); textual criticism (most of the stones are broken and the texts damaged); translation of the Greek and establishing the genre of the text; constructing the historical context for the inividual text (in commentaries); and writing about what inscriptions can tell us about Dionysos. I have traveled to Germany, Greece, and Turkey to work on these texts.<br/>
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|digital interests = Digital interests<br/>
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|digital interests content = I began to use structural markup back in 1984 and all of my files are encoded with tags that can be converted to TEI conformant tagging. Epigraphists have been working collaboratively to develop internationally recognized tags for inscriptions and papyri (called Epidoc), and 2009 will be the right year to bring my project into step with the latest developments for presenting inscriptions and commentaries in sturctured markup to readers via the internet.<br/>
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}}

Revision as of 20:52, 3 December 2008

Susan Guettel Cole
Professor of Classics, emerita

CAPTION FOR YOUR PHOTO
Research interests: Greek history and history of Greek religion
Institutional affiliation: University at Buffalo
Departmental affiliation: Department of Classics]
Office location: MFAC
E-mail: sgcole@buffalo.edu
URI: [YOUR STAFF PROFILE URI URI]
Membership status: Charter member
Digital projects: Epigraphica Dionysiaca

I have been working on a long term project to collect Greek inscriptions about the Greek god Dionysos and the organization of rituals dealing with his worship. I use Epidoc, a selection of TEI tags for encoding inscriptions. This project seeks to emphasize the ritual content of the texts and to make that content easily accessible through indexes and concordances generated by TEI procedures.

Susan Guettel Cole

Background

I studied Greek literature at the University of Minnesota where I took a year long seminar called "The Conflict of Religions in the Roman Empire." The breadth of the course did not prevent study in depth. My seminar project was the Samothracian mysteries, rituals that have left very scanty evidence. I began to study inscriptions in order to expand the discussion, a project that led to a dissertation and a book. In the mid-eighties I began to work seriously on the epigraphical evidence for the cult of Dionysos and assembled about 900 texts. The work demands dealing with physical objects (the stones on which the texts are inscribed); textual criticism (most of the stones are broken and the texts damaged); translation of the Greek and establishing the genre of the text; constructing the historical context for the inividual text (in commentaries); and writing about what inscriptions can tell us about Dionysos. I have traveled to Germany, Greece, and Turkey to work on these texts.


Digital interests

I began to use structural markup back in 1984 and all of my files are encoded with tags that can be converted to TEI conformant tagging. Epigraphists have been working collaboratively to develop internationally recognized tags for inscriptions and papyri (called Epidoc), and 2009 will be the right year to bring my project into step with the latest developments for presenting inscriptions and commentaries in sturctured markup to readers via the internet.

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