Researchers working with the TCP texts have produced, and will doubtless continue to produce, a wide variety of projects and scholarship. Some examples follow below. We hope you will contact us to let us know what you’re working on, or if we can answer any questions or provide any support for your work with the TCP texts.
Scholarly and popular editions
- A True and Exact History of the Island of Barbados, 5th Edition, edited by David Smith
- The Holinshed Project, Oxford University
- Spenser Archive, Washington University, St. Louis
- Digital Donne, Texas A & M
- OUP Complete Works of James Shirley, Anglia Ruskin University
- Digital Anthology of Early Modern English Drama, Folger Shakespeare Library
- Richard Baxter Correspondence Project (Johanna Harris and Alison Searle)
- Early Irish Fiction 1680-1820 (series published by Four Courts Press, based in part on ECCO-TCP texts), ed. by Anne Markey, of Trinity College, et al.
Thematic websites combining selected TCP texts with other digital resources
- Witches of Early Modern England
- Poetic Miscellanies
- LEME: Lexicons of Early Modern English
- The Map of Early Modern London
- Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (beta)
- Literature in Context (an in-progress open-access anthology ed. by John O’Brien, University of Virginia)
Text analysis and corpus linguistics
- Shakespeare Genre Visualizations by Michael Witmore: Wine Dark Sea
- Abbot, Monk, and MorphAdorner applied to TCP files (a complex, multi-institutional project transforming TCP texts into a tokenized, parsed, and corrected universal ‘book of English’)
- Research by Ted Underwood, University of Illinois
- Early Print, including Anupam Basu’s EEBO N-GRAM browser (Washington University, St. Louis)
- Visualizing English Print, University of Wisconsin and University of Strathclyde
- Global Renaissance, James Lee, Grinnell College
- Corpora prepared by the University of Helsinki’s VARIENG Research Unit for Variation, Contacts, and Change in English
- CQPWeb hosting of EEBO texts in several versions (‘Corpus Query Processor,’ ed. Andrew Hardie et al., University of Lancaster)
- “Corpus Linguistics and ‘Officers of the United States’,” by James C. Phillips, Benjamin Lee and Jacob Crump, Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 42:3 (2019), 871-930. [Using Evans TCP in an attempt to ascertain the public meaning of the phrase as it bears on constitutional law.]
Portals to search across many resources at once (including TCP texts)
- ARTFL
- Eighteenth Connect
- ReKN (Renaissance Knowledge Network), in association with the INKE Project, University of Victoria
- JISC Historic Books
- Manuscripts Online
- PhiloLogic@NU
Software/Tool development projects using the TCP corpus for testing and development
Other collaborations and relevant projects
- EEBO Introductions Series, ProQuest
- English Broadside Ballad Archive, University of California – Santa Barbara
- Patterns of Reference, Imperial College London
- The IMPACT (‘Improving Access to Text’) pan-European project
- Shakespeare Quartos Archive
- NEH workshop on (EEBO-based) text analysis and visualization (Benjamin Brochstein, Rice University)
- Symposium on “Big Data and Medieval Studies: the Present and Future of Medieval Text Archives” (Trinity College Dublin, June 2017)