Corpora
Ruskin often formed texts into groups, by compiling anthologies of texts or organizing texts into a single composite work.
In
ERM, this kind of group is encoded as a
corpus. Our aim in encoding and describing corpora is
to express the textual forms resulting from Ruskinʼs impulse to anthologize,
while complying with the TEI standards for XML
(see
Editorial and Encoding Rationale and Methodology).
Listed in the Corpora Index are titles of projects that Ruskin clearly developed as distinct corpora. The list includes titles that overlap with some
found in the Works Indices, since Ruskin conceived of some groups of texts as a single composite work. Other titles in the Corpora Index are nearly coterminous
with titles found in the Manuscripts Index, Ruskin sometimes using the physical boundaries of a major manuscript to help define a corpus.
Indeed, in the encoding procedures of ERM,
any major manuscript forms a kind of corpus, albeit a miscellaneous one, and can itself be made up of other corpora. Listed here, however,
are manuscripts that Ruskin identified as distinct anthologies or composites.
Titles of copora default to an Apparatus Page, which in some cases is identical to a Work Apparatus, but which in other cases such as poetry anthologies assembles
information unique to a collection (e.g., title, contents, date, organizing themes, and other discussion). The Apparatus Page links to the corpus witness, or in some cases
to multiple witnesses or corpora that constitute a version or versions of the collection.
Works by Others
If, in the encoding of the early manuscripts, we discover an intervention by a writer other than Ruskin
or if we find that Ruskin transcribed without substantially altering a text by another writer, we
encode and class these texts as works by others. Just as for works by Ruskin, these links default to an Apparatus
Page.
Manuscripts
Manuscripts are physical documents manifesting Ruskinʼs texts—that is, they consist of various physical witnesses of works.
While many manuscripts manifest only a single witness of a single work, more typically a manuscript manifests many texts.
The available manuscripts described and facsimilied in the archive are surveyed in
Overview of the Manuscripts.
The entry path to a manuscript in the archive defaults to its Apparatus Page,
which organizes information about the manuscript (e.g., about the manuscriptʼs title, location, provenance, description, contents, date,
and other discussion). The Contents section of the Apparatus Page, which lists the works contained in a manuscript,
links to those worksʼ Apparatus Pages.
- MS I
- MS IA
- MS IB
- MS IC
- MS II
- MS II-AE
- MS III
- MS IIIA
- MS IV
- MS IVA
- MS IVB
- MS IVC
- MS IVD
- MS V
- MS VI
- MS VII
- MS VIII
- MS VIIIA
- MS VIIIB
- MS IX
- MS X
- MS XA
- MS XB
- MS XI
- MS XIA
- MS XIB
- MS XIC
- MS XID
- RF T70
- Juvenilia A
- Juvenilia B
- Juvenilia C
- Houghton