Check Anthology Status

Our continuous integration server (Jenkins) generates a new publication status report for each anthology. It regenerates these reports with every successful Jenkins build.
The checks built into our system ensure that your anthology includes only published editions licensed for your anthology, and only the components of those editions that are published and licensed. Jenkins first checks the status of the file that drives your entire anthology (dre.xml, ise.xml, qme.xml, etc). It then checks all the editions that are listed in that file for inclusion in your anthology. It checks the edition page for each edition, and then checks all the files that are listed in that edition page. The point is to have a cascading series of checks. If the edition is not included in your anthology file, then Jenkins does not check that edition (thus saving processing time).
You will see from the report that Jenkins is looking principally for three things in each file that is meant to be included in your anthology:
Does the file have @status value of "published" on the <revisionDesc> element in the <teiHeader> ? I.e., Is the file ready to be published? The LEMDO Team decides when a file is ready to be published (included in an anthology release). Note that files can be published without peer-review, if the file does not require peer review (as might be the case with an Acknowledgements file, say) or if the anthology lead decides that there is some benefit to having the file available to the public.
Is the file licensed for the anthology? I.e., does the file have a <licence> element that points to the anthology that is being built?
Does the file have a correctly formatted edition statement ( <editionStmt> )? All files being published must have an edition statement that fits LEMDOʼs standard format of Released with {anthology name} 1.0.
Tasks that need your attention before your next release are marked in red. Tasks that are done are marked in green.
You can find your anthology status page on the LEMDO-dev website under the Anthologies tab in the top navigation bar.

Prosopography

Janelle Jenstad

Janelle Jenstad is a Professor of English at the University of Victoria, Director of The Map of Early Modern London, and Director of Linked Early Modern Drama Online. With Jennifer Roberts-Smith and Mark Kaethler, she co-edited Shakespeare’s Language in Digital Media: Old Words, New Tools (Routledge). She has edited John Stow’s A Survey of London (1598 text) for MoEML and is currently editing The Merchant of Venice (with Stephen Wittek) and Heywood’s 2 If You Know Not Me You Know Nobody for DRE. Her articles have appeared in Digital Humanities Quarterly, Elizabethan Theatre, Early Modern Literary Studies, Shakespeare Bulletin, Renaissance and Reformation, and The Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies. She contributed chapters to Approaches to Teaching Othello (MLA); Teaching Early Modern Literature from the Archives (MLA); Institutional Culture in Early Modern England (Brill); Shakespeare, Language, and the Stage (Arden); Performing Maternity in Early Modern England (Ashgate); New Directions in the Geohumanities (Routledge); Early Modern Studies and the Digital Turn (Iter); Placing Names: Enriching and Integrating Gazetteers (Indiana); Making Things and Drawing Boundaries (Minnesota); Rethinking Shakespeare Source Study: Audiences, Authors, and Digital Technologies (Routledge); and Civic Performance: Pageantry and Entertainments in Early Modern London (Routledge). For more details, see janellejenstad.com.

Joey Takeda

Joey Takeda is LEMDO’s Consulting Programmer and Designer, a role he assumed in 2020 after three years as the Lead Developer on LEMDO.

Martin Holmes

Martin Holmes has worked as a developer in the UVicʼs Humanities Computing and Media Centre for over two decades, and has been involved with dozens of Digital Humanities projects. He has served on the TEI Technical Council and as Managing Editor of the Journal of the TEI. He took over from Joey Takeda as lead developer on LEMDO in 2020. He is a collaborator on the SSHRC Partnership Grant led by Janelle Jenstad.

Navarra Houldin

Project manager 2022–present. Textual remediator 2021–present. Navarra Houldin (they/them) completed their BA in History and Spanish at the University of Victoria in 2022. During their degree, they worked as a teaching assistant with the University of Victoriaʼs Department of Hispanic and Italian Studies. Their primary research was on gender and sexuality in early modern Europe and Latin America.

Tracey El Hajj

Junior Programmer 2019–2020. Research Associate 2020–2021. Tracey received her PhD from the Department of English at the University of Victoria in the field of Science and Technology Studies. Her research focuses on the algorhythmics of networked communications. She was a 2019–2020 President’s Fellow in Research-Enriched Teaching at UVic, where she taught an advanced course on Artificial Intelligence and Everyday Life. Tracey was also a member of the Map of Early Modern London team, between 2018 and 2021. Between 2020 and 2021, she was a fellow in residence at the Praxis Studio for Comparative Media Studies, where she investigated the relationships between artificial intelligence, creativity, health, and justice. As of July 2021, Tracey has moved into the alt-ac world for a term position, while also teaching in the English Department at the University of Victoria.

Orgography

LEMDO Team (LEMD1)

The LEMDO Team is based at the University of Victoria and normally comprises the project director, the lead developer, project manager, junior developers(s), remediators, encoders, and remediating editors.

Metadata