@djbpitt Because the group had to find the full XML version of Medea from a different source than their other 3 texts, the structural markup differs slightly between them. The main cause for concern is that individual lines in Medea are marked-up with <l> elements, whereas speech text in the other three, such as Women of Trachis, for example, do not encode individual lines but rather chunks of text (by speaker) in <p> elements. For continuity purposes and to hopefully avoid overlapping hierarchies, the group would like to remove the <l> elements in Medea and instead wrap speech text in <p> elements.
@djbpitt Because the group had to find the full XML version of Medea from a different source than their other 3 texts, the structural markup differs slightly between them. The main cause for concern is that individual lines in Medea are marked-up with
<l>
elements, whereas speech text in the other three, such as Women of Trachis, for example, do not encode individual lines but rather chunks of text (by speaker) in<p>
elements. For continuity purposes and to hopefully avoid overlapping hierarchies, the group would like to remove the<l>
elements in Medea and instead wrap speech text in<p>
elements.