On the potential of corpus-based handwriting analysis: a refined analysis of the Zhangjiashan tomb library - HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Communication dans un congrès Année : 2016

On the potential of corpus-based handwriting analysis: a refined analysis of the Zhangjiashan tomb library

Résumé

In this talk, I will present work conducted towards an analysis of the scribal hands appearing in the Zhangjiashan M247 corpus, attempting to refine previous work that I have already presented on the topic in the light of the workshop’s suggested readings. Corpus-based handwriting analysis, I believe, has the potential to reveal the hand of the tomb occupant, particularly as a single hand might appear in multiple texts found therewith and in the very documents thought to be the most personal—agendas, diaries, etc. If we can identify the hand of the tomb occupant, this, among other things, will provide us with the smoking gun needed to lay to rest lingering doubts about the ‘realness’ of tomb texts as mingqi 明器 specially produced by funerary workshops. The Zhangjiashan M247 corpus provides us with an ideal set of circumstances in this regard, considering the presence of similar orthographies in the calendar table and the back-and-forth seen in the mathematical manuscript Suanshushu 筭數術 (see Mo & Lin, 2016). In this talk, I will aim to press further on the problem of distinguishing hands from scripts so as to concretise this relationship and draw further connections across the M247 corpus.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
On the potential of corpus-based handwriting analysis.pdf ( 3.31 Mo ) Télécharger
Origine : Fichiers produits par l'(les) auteur(s)
Loading...

Dates et versions

halshs-01368873, version 1 (09-11-2016)

Licence

Paternité - Pas d'utilisation commerciale - Partage selon les Conditions Initiales - CC BY 4.0

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : halshs-01368873 , version 1

Citer

Daniel Patrick Morgan. On the potential of corpus-based handwriting analysis: a refined analysis of the Zhangjiashan tomb library. Scribal Hands and Scribal Practices in Manuscripts from Warring States and Early Imperial China, Universität Heidelberg, Nov 2016, Heidelberg, Germany. ⟨halshs-01368873⟩
198 Consultations
150 Téléchargements
Dernière date de mise à jour le 20/04/2024
comment ces indicateurs sont-ils produits

Partager

Gmail Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Plus