In an effort to see how quickly I can do analysis, against the entire issue of a given journal, I did some reading against Theological Librarianship (Volume 16, Number 1), and in the end, I am going away with more questions than answers, but I did learn about "ethiopic".
When it comes to size and scope, there are nine items in the issue for a total size of about 20,000 words, which, in my world, is small. One item is an editorial, there are a few reviews, and the balance are articles. See the automatically generated bibliography and index page for more detail. † Being a librarian, I am always interested in aboutness. "What are these things about?" The computed keywords allude to answers, and in this case I might say the issue is about "library", "theology", "church", and "collection". Not too surprising, but the word "ethiopic" intrigued me.
As a man named Firth once said, "You shall know a word by the company it keeps", and consequently I created a set of simple word clouds illustrating the other nearby words used when a given keyword was mentioned. The results are below. The associations may not be what you expect, and I'm getting a better idea regarding the context of "ethiopic":
library |
theology |
collection |
church |
ethiopic |
labels weights features library 0.27101 library research theological theology expertis... theology 0.24435 theology digital field book science research s... information 0.10840 information literacy intellectual bivens-tatum... texts 0.09228 texts sacred materiality digital textual media... digital 0.08652 digital humanities libraries tools scholarship... students 0.07385 students ethiopic workbook texts ancient lexic... collection 0.05828 collection church library collections theologi... new 0.03053 new files opportunity found college autoethnog... works 0.02591 works materials community sermons contains joh...
For a good time, I pivoted the underlying model on author names to ultimately visualized who discussed what topic. More less (mostly more), each author discusses something distinct:
Similarly, we can identify the words, in this case nouns and proper nouns, shared between each author. Thus, below is an illustration of the words that occur in at least five of the nine documents, and the words seem to surround a theme of academia:
Basics of Ancient Ethiopic contains 38 chapters, beginning with the alphabet, working its way through nouns and verb-forms, and concluding with the syntax. Each chapter ends with lexi- con words to remember and exercises highlighting the grammar component tackled in the chapter as well as lexicon words in context. At the end of the book is the full lexicon, black and white images of Ge’ez manuscripts, an example of an advanced reading exercise, and a bibliography... Wright aims to shift students from reading texts in transliteration to reading texts in Ethiopic script as quickly as possible.
End of story.
† I really ought to modify the automatically generated bibliographies in order to link to the bibliographic items themselves. Such would significantly increase usability. Hmmm...
Eric Lease Morgan <emorgan@nd.edu>
Navari Family Center for Digital Scholarship
University of Notre Dame
April 27, 2023