A collaborative effort—centered doubly at Northwestern University and Washington University in St. Louis—to transform the early English print record, from 1473 to the early 1700s, into a linguistically annotated and deeply searchable text corpus.
Vossian antonomasia is a stylistic device which attributes a certain property to a person by naming another (more well-known, more popular) person as a reference point. For instance, when Jim Koch is described as “the Steve Jobs of Beer”, certain qualities of Steve Jobs, be it entrepreneurship or persuasiveness, are assigned to Jim Koch, co-founder and chairman of the Boston Beer Company. VAs consist of three parts: a source (in our example “Steve Jobs”) serves as paragon to elevate the target (“Jim Koch”) by applying a modifier (“of Beer”) that provides the corresponding context. VA is named after Gerardus Vossius (1577– 1649), the Dutch classical scholar and author of rhetorical textbooks, who first distinguished and described VA as a separate phenomenon.
P. Moreira, Y. Bizzoni, K. Nielbo, I. Lassen, and M. Thomsen. Proceedings of the The 5th Workshop on Narrative Understanding, page 25--35. Toronto, Canada, Association for Computational Linguistics, (July 2023)
A. Brunner, S. Engelberg, F. Jannidis, N. Tu, and L. Weimer. Proceedings of the 12th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference, page 803--812. Marseille, France, European Language Resources Association, (May 2020)
D. Schmidt, A. Zehe, J. Lorenzen, L. Sergel, S. Düker, M. Krug, and F. Puppe. Proceedings of the 5th Joint SIGHUM Workshop on Computational Linguistics for Cultural Heritage, Social Sciences, Humanities and Literature, page 49--56. Punta Cana, Dominican Republic (online), Association for Computational Linguistics, (November 2021)