id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_ngg3dfjszvfhnn5uxexfvhsgxu Adam Hammond Annotation Guideline No. 8: Annotation Guidelines for Narrative Levels 2020.0 8 .pdf application/pdf 3029 263 65 Listening to the SANTA presentation at DH2017, it struck me that the phenomenon of narrative levels would make for a similarly meaningful annotation http://www.adamhammond.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/narrative-frames-annotation-guidelines.pdf http://www.adamhammond.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/narrative-frames-annotation-guidelines.pdf http://www.adamhammond.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/eng287_narrative_levels_lecture.pdf http://www.adamhammond.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/eng287_narrative_levels_lecture.pdf A set of narrative texts are to be annotated for narrative levels. The level attribute is used to express the degree of embedding of a narrative. narrative is not embedded within any others, it is a top-level or first-degree narrative and should be given the attribute value of "A". For instance, the Thousand and One Nights contains hundreds (in some tellings, exactly1,001) of "B"-level narratives — some of A simple text containing only one narrative might be annotated as followed, died.A text containing a single "B"-level narrative might be from that of the "A"-level narrative, it is given the narrator attribute of "2".) me and I died.A text containing two "B"-level narratives and a level="A" narr="1">"Let me tell you a story. ./cache/work_ngg3dfjszvfhnn5uxexfvhsgxu.pdf ./txt/work_ngg3dfjszvfhnn5uxexfvhsgxu.txt