DHUM 491: Remediating Bills of Mortality
This document is currently in draft. When it has been reviewed and proofed, it will
be
published on the site.
Please note that it is not of publishable quality yet.
DHUM 491: Remediating Bills of Mortality
Introduction
DHUM491 is a directed studies course in Digital Humanities at the University of Victoria.
Joey Takeda designed this iteration of the course, which is being supervised by Janelle Jenstad in Summer 2015, through the department of English.1
The Bills of Mortality were printed broadsides listing the numbers of deaths and christenings.
The earliest collections of these in London date to the early 16th century; from 1625
on, they were privately printed on a press owned by the Worshipful Company of Parish
Clerks and specially licensed by Star Chamber. In 1662, John Graunt compiled and analyzed
a collection of these documents, arguably ushering in the field of demography and
population statistics. In this course, we attempt to read these bills of mortality
not for numbers but for toponyms (placenames). We are interested in the following
questions: How does reading the bills of mortality for place help shape our understanding
of place, death, and the printing press in Early Modern London? How can we map this
data? How does compiling the data in the digital environment change the nature of
the documents we are remediating? And how do our digital remediation processes help
us understand the nature of these broadsides and the early remediations of data gathered
by women, compiled by parish clerks, printed on perhaps London’s only legal private
press, and then recompiled by the first demographer?
Learning Outcomes
By the end of this directed reading, Takeda will:
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have more robust tools and skills for searching repositories of primary texts;
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have a better understanding of the techniques of microhistorical analysis and macroanalytic reading;
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have developed a way of reading a small, focussed corpus of demographic texts as literary artefacts using humanities computing tools;
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understand the basic issues to consider in remediating texts (from manuscript records to printed tables, to demographic compilations, to digital editions and databases);
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know how to write XSLT transformations to render printed historical documents as texts and as databases;
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be able to mobilize historical data in the service of an argument about mortality and space in early modern London; and
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know and be able to recount the history of the Parish Clerks’ private printing press.
Assignments
Note: the assignments are currently in draft. After they are proofed, they will be
posted on the site.
Written Assignments
Editing a text requires careful documentation and explication. Takeda’s edition of
the Bills of Mortality, like any good critical edition, will be carefully and thoroughly
documented through annotated bibliographies and critical apparatus.
Assignment | Details | Weight |
Preface for Finding Aid | Defining and Refining: In order to compose a finding aid for the Bills of Mortality, we must have an understanding of what a Bill of Mortality is. Finding aids require a preface that spells out its inclusions, exclusions, criteria, and sources. | 8% |
Annotated Bibliography of Secondary Sources | Making an Intervention: What critical work has been done? What work needs to be done on the Bills of Mortality? This annotated bibliography will provide | 8% |
Reflection | Critically reflecting: These texts were already a remediation of data. Given that Takeda’s project is also a remediation of data, he will take the opportunity to think through the critical implications of aggregation, analysis, and remediation. How are these processes critically significant, similar, and/or different? This will be published on the MoEML blog. | 8% |
The Edition | Making the Edition: The final paper will be the critical apparatus for the edition
of the bills. The critical information will apear in two places: an introductory page
that includes sections like an introduction, textual note, critical overview (drawn
from the annotated bibliography of secondary sources), the bills, and ancilliary information
and encoded in the <teiHeader> .
|
33% |
Encoding Assignments
Summary
There will be two encoding assignments. The first will be a chronological finding
aid for the Bills of Mortality, listing all known bills (extant and lost). There is
no readily accessible list of the Bills of Mortality; MoEML will publish this list
for the benefit of other scholars. The second encoding assignment is to transcribe,
transform, edit, and anthologize the extant Bills of Mortality. Takeda will devise
new remediation tools with Excel, XSLT, and CSS. His edition will be a critically-informed
remediation of the data.
Assignment | Details | Weight |
Encoding Assignment 1 | Finding Aid of all known Mortality Bills for London from the earliest up to John Graunt. Takeda will submit this as an encoded MoEML table. | 10% |
Encoding Assignment 2 | Encoding, Editing, and Anthologizing the Bills. Takeda will submit the encoded texts and the anthology incrementally, as a new section in MoEML’s Library. | 33% |
Readings
Note: these primary and secondary sources will all be added to MoEML’s bibliography.
Primary Documents
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The Bills of Mortality
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John Graunt
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John Bell
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Totaro, Rebecca, ed. The Plague in Essential Elizabethan Sources, 1558-1603. Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne UP, 2010.
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Birch, Thomas, ed. A Collection of the yearly bills of mortality, from 1657 to 1758 inclusive. London: A. Millar, 1759. Open.
Resources
Nelson, Carolyn and Matthew Seccombe. British Newspapers and Periodicals 1641-1700: A Short-Title Catalogue of Serialsd
in England, Scotland, Ireland, and British America. New York: MLA, 1987.
Secondary
I have categorized the bibliography under multiple headings for convenience. Often
items in these categories overlap in some way (Greenberg’s essay for example) so each
essay is placed in the category most suitable.
Early Modern
Adams, Reginald H. The Parish Clerks of London: A History of the Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks
in London. London and Chichester: Phillimore, 1971.
Clegg, Cyndia Susan. Press Censorship in Caroline England. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars, 2008.
Clegg, Cyndia Susan. Press Censorship in Elizabethan England. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars, 1997.
Plomer, Henry Robert. A Short History of English Printing, 1476–1898. London: Kegan Paul, 1900.
Siebert, Frederick Seaton. Freedom of the Press in England, 1476-1776: The Rise and Decline of Government Controls. Urbana: U of Illinois P, 1952.
Bayatrizi, Zohreh. Life Sentences: The Modern Ordering of Mortality. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 2008.
Champion, J.A.I. Epidemic Disease in London. London: Institute of Historical Research, 1993. Open. [Each essay is linked in .pdf form at the end of the page.]
Christie, James. Some account of parish clerks, more especially of the Ancient Fraternity (Bretherne
and Sisterne) of S. Nicholas, now known as the Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks. London: 1893. Open.
Farren, Edwin James. Historical Essay on the Rise and Early Progress of the Doctrine of Life-contingencies
in England, Leading to the Establishment of the First Life-assurance Society in which
Ages Were Distinguished. London: Smith, Elder, & Co, 1844. Open.
Greenberg, Stephen.
Plague, theng Press, and Public Health in Seventeenth-Century London.Huntington Library Quarterly 67.4 (2004): 508-527.
Harding, Vanessa.
Burial of the Plague Dead in Early Modern London.Epidemic Disease in London. Ed. J.A.I. Champion. London: Institute of Historical Research. Open.University of London.
Harding, Vanessa. The Dead and the Living in Paris and London, 1500-1670. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2002.
Kreager, Philip.
New Light on Graunt.Population Studies 42.1 (1988): 129-140. DOI: 10.1080/0032472031000143156.
Maitland, William. The history and survey of London : From its Foundation to the Present Time. Vol. 2. London: 1756. Open.
Munkhoff, Richelle.
Reckoning Death: Women Searchers and the Bills of Mortality in Early Modern London.Rhetorics of Bodily Disease and Health in Medieval and Early Modern England. Ed. Jennifer C. Vaught. Surrey: Ashgate, 2010. 119-134.
Newman, Karen. Cultural Capitals: Early Modern London and Paris. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 2007. Read Ch.7,
Death, Name, and Number.
Plomer, Henry Robert.
Literature of the Plague.The Library 1 (1891): 209-228. DOI: 10.1093/library/s1-3.1.209.
Robertson, J.C.
Reckoning with London: Interpreting the Bills of Mortality before John Graunt.Urban History 23.3 (1996): 325-350. DOI: 10.1017/S0963926800016898.
Slack, Paul. The Impact of Plague in Tudor and Stuart England. London: Routledge, 1985. [Especially Chapter 6:
Metropolitan Crises.]
Slauter, Will.
Write Up Your Dead: The Bills of Mortality and the London plague of 1665.Media History 17.1 (2008): 1-15. DOI: 10.1080/13688804.2011.532371.
Sullivan, Erin.
Physical and Spiritual Illness: Narrative Appropriations of the Bills of Mortality.Representing the Plague in Early Modern England. Ed. Rebecca Totaro and Ernest B. Gilman. New York and London: Routledge, 2011.
Sutherland, Ian.
Mortality in London, 1563 to 1665.Population and Social Change. Ed. D.V. Glass and Roger Revelle. Edward Arnold: London, 1972. 287-320.
Twigg, Graham.
Plague in London: Spatial and Temporal Aspects of Mortality.Epidemic Disease in London. Ed. J.A.I. Champion. London: Institute of Historical Research. Open.University of London.
Wilson, F. P. The Plague in Shakespeare’s London. London: OUP, 1963.
Digital Humanities
Bolter, Jay David, and Richard Grusin. Remediation: Understanding New Media. Cambridge, MA: MIT P, 2000.
Bowker, Geoffrey C., and Susan Leigh Star. Sorting Things Out: Classifications and Its Consequences. Cambridge: MIT P, 2000.
Burnard, Lou, Katherine O’Brien O’Keeffe, and John Unsworth, eds. Electronic Textual Editing. New York: Modern Language Association, 2006.
Byrant, John. The Fluid Text. Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 2002.
Cummings, James.
The Materiality of Markup and the Text Encoding Initiative.Digitizing Medieval and Early Modern Material Culture. Ed. Brent Nelson and Melissa M. Terras. Toronto: Iter; Tempe, AZ: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2012. 49-81.
Galey, Alan, Richard Cunningham, Brent Nelson, Ray Siemens, and The INKE Team.
Beyond Remediation: The Role of Textual Studies in Implementing New Knowledge Environments.Digitizing Medieval and Early Modern Material Culture. Ed. Brent Nelson and Melissa M. Terras. Toronto: Iter, Inc.; Tempe, Arizona: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2012. 21-48.
Hayles, N. Katherine, and Jessica Pressman, eds. Comparative Textual Media: Transforming the Humanities in the Postprint Era. Minneapolis and London: U of Minneapolis P, 2013.
Hayles, N. Katherine. Electronic Literature. Notre Dame, IN: U of Notre Dame P, 2008.
Jockers, Matthew L. Macroanalysis: Digital Methods and Literary History. Urbana, Chicago, and Springfield: U of Illinois P, 2013.
Moretti, Franco. Graphs, Maps, Trees. London and New York: Verso, 2005.
Moretti, Franco. Distant Reading. London and New York: Verso, 2013.
Tennison, Jeni. Beginning XSLT 2.0: From Novice to Professional. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2005.
Cite this page
MLA citation
DHUM 491: Remediating Bills of Mortality.The Map of Early Modern London, edited by , U of Victoria, 20 Jun. 2018, mapoflondon.uvic.ca/DHUM491_2015.htm.
Chicago citation
DHUM 491: Remediating Bills of Mortality.The Map of Early Modern London. Ed. . Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed June 20, 2018. http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/DHUM491_2015.htm.
APA citation
The Map of Early Modern London. Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved from http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/DHUM491_2015.htm.
2018. DHUM 491: Remediating Bills of Mortality. In (Ed), RIS file (for RefMan, EndNote etc.)
Provider: University of Victoria Database: The Map of Early Modern London Content: text/plain; charset="utf-8" TY - ELEC A1 - Takeda, Joey ED - Jenstad, Janelle T1 - DHUM 491: Remediating Bills of Mortality T2 - The Map of Early Modern London PY - 2018 DA - 2018/06/20 CY - Victoria PB - University of Victoria LA - English UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/DHUM491_2015.htm UR - http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/xml/standalone/DHUM491_2015.xml ER -
RefWorks
RT Web Page SR Electronic(1) A1 Takeda, Joey A6 Jenstad, Janelle T1 DHUM 491: Remediating Bills of Mortality T2 The Map of Early Modern London WP 2018 FD 2018/06/20 RD 2018/06/20 PP Victoria PB University of Victoria LA English OL English LK http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/DHUM491_2015.htm
TEI citation
<bibl type="mla"><author><name ref="#TAKE1"><surname>Takeda</surname>, <forename>Joey</forename></name></author>. <title level="a">DHUM 491: Remediating Bills of Mortality</title>. <title level="m">The Map of Early Modern London</title>, edited by <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><forename>Janelle</forename> <surname>Jenstad</surname></name></editor>, <publisher>U of Victoria</publisher>, <date when="2018-06-20">20 Jun. 2018</date>, <ref target="http://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/DHUM491_2015.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/DHUM491_2015.htm</ref>.</bibl>Personography
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Janelle Jenstad
JJ
Janelle Jenstad, associate professor in the department of English at the University of Victoria, is the general editor and coordinator of The Map of Early Modern London. She is also the assistant coordinating editor of Internet Shakespeare Editions. She has taught at Queen’s University, the Summer Academy at the Stratford Festival, the University of Windsor, and the University of Victoria. Her articles have appeared in the Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Early Modern Literary Studies, Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare Bulletin: A Journal of Performance Criticism, and The Silver Society Journal. Her book chapters have appeared (or will appear) in Performing Maternity in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2007), Approaches to Teaching Othello (Modern Language Association, 2005), Shakespeare, Language and the Stage, The Fifth Wall: Approaches to Shakespeare from Criticism, Performance and Theatre Studies (Arden/Thomson Learning, 2005), Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society (Brill, 2004), New Directions in the Geohumanities: Art, Text, and History at the Edge of Place (Routledge, 2011), and Teaching Early Modern English Literature from the Archives (MLA, forthcoming). She is currently working on an edition of The Merchant of Venice for ISE and Broadview P. She lectures regularly on London studies, digital humanities, and on Shakespeare in performance.Roles played in the project
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Janelle Jenstad is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:
Janelle Jenstad is mentioned in the following documents:
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Joey Takeda
JT
Programmer, 2018-present; Junior Programmer, 2015 to 2017; Research Assistant, 2014 to 2017. Joey Takeda is an MA student at the University of British Columbia in the Department of English (Science and Technology research stream). He completed his BA honours in English (with a minor in Women’s Studies) at the University of Victoria in 2016. His primary research interests include diasporic and indigenous Canadian and American literature, critical theory, cultural studies, and the digital humanities.Roles played in the project
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Geographic Information Specialist
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Contributions by this author
Joey Takeda is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:
Joey Takeda is mentioned in the following documents:
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