MORE ABOUT OUR PROJECT
            This project currently focuses on the lyrics in the musical
                    Hamilton: An American Musical. In regards to characters, we are looking
                specifically at who is talking the most in the musical versus who is talked about
                the most and who individual characters are referencing. Learning more about who a
                character talks about and is connected with can give us a better understanding of
                relationships between characters.
            Another aspect we're looking at in-depth is the repeated words found
                throughout multiple songs. There are several lines that are present in three or more
                songs. These phrases contribute towards characterization, the story, and themes
                present throughout the musical. We will look at where these phrases appear and track
                when they appear the most or don't appear at all in regards to the overall
                story.
            Along with the musical's characters and themes, we decided to
                investigate the historical accuracy of the musical by researching specific lyrics.
                We were interested in finding out if the musical was more factual or more fictional,
                so we selected over 100 lyrics to research to determine the historical accuracy of
                    Hamilton: An American Musical.
            Other elements we're interested in include dates and places. We've
                created an interactive Google Map which features all the places mentioned in
                    Hamilton and in the description of each waypoint is a list of the songs
                that particular place is referenced. We've also created a timeline which has each
                song's events dated by year. We've also included a more in-depth description of the
                events with exact or estimated dates to establish a specific time frame for the
                musical.
         
        
            MEET THE TEAM
            
                AUDREY HUNKER
                A student at the University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg, Audrey Hunker is
                    pursuing a major in Creative and Professional Writing and a Digital Studies
                    Certficate. She is an original member of The Lope de Vega Project team and a founding member and
                    leader of The Hamilton Project team. Her go-to song from Hamilton to
                    perform in the car is "You'll Be Back."
             
            
                BRI FILER
                Bri Filer
                    is a student at the University of Pittsburgh at Greensburgh, majoring in
                    Creative and Professional Writing, minoring in English Literature, and pursuing
                    a Digital Studies Certificate. She is a founding member of the Hamilton Project
                    team. Her go-to song from Hamilton to rap along to is "My Shot." 
             
         
        
            METHODOLOGY
            Mark-up Process:
             To start the project, we took the lyrics for the musical off of the
                Atlantic Records website and decided to mark them up using TEI. From there we
                created an ODD to identify which TEI elements we would be using in our project.
                Within the ODD we created Schemas that would fire on our attributes specific to
                phrases and names so no spelling errors would occur. and we used regular expressions
                to accurately tag all the elements we were planning to look further into during
                analysis. After tagging up all key elements and turning all the lyric text files
                into XML that kept the song's original format, the song's XML files were transformed
                using XSLT into HTML files featuring a JavaScript checklist box to highlight all the
                names, dates, phrases, and places in each song. 
            Frequency of Character References and Speeches Network Graphs:
             One question we had while analysing the lyrics was about how often
                characters spoke in the musical and how often characters were referenced in the
                musical. We further wanted to investigate who references who as well to see which
                characters discuss each other and to see which characters talk about themselves. In
                order to investigate this, a directed network graph was created in Cytoscape to show
                the indegree of how often a character is referenced which is represented by the size
                of the nodes in the graph and the outdegree of how often a character speaks which is
                represented by the color of the nodes in the graph. To compile the information,
                XQuery was used to grab all distinct speakers and look down to see specific
                references to characters the speaker made throughout the entire musical. A TSV was
                saved from the output data and that was imported into cytoscape to compile the
                graph. In Cytoscape the edges which related to each song in the musical were bundled
                to help provide better readability. Another graph was created without bundling the
                edges to create separate network graphs for each song to show which characters
                referenced who in each song. A personography table, created using XSLT, lists the
                distinct names of people refenced by that character, who references that character,
                and the number of times that character is referenced.
            Line Graph and Table of Repeated Phrases
            One of the goals of the project was to track repeated words/phrases
                within the musical. We chose eight distinct phrases: my shot, satisifed, helpless,
                wait, legacy, time, look around, and rise (up). For more information as to why we
                chose these phrases, please click here. To
                investigate the frequency of these phrases, we created a line graph that would track
                each phrase in each song over the entire musical. Using XSLT to run over our
                collection of XML versions of the songs, we created an SVG graph. A corresponding
                table was created in the same fasion.
            Map of Places Mentioned in Hamilton: An American Musical
            To gain a better understanding of the more historical side of the
                musical, we chose to create a map that would visualize all the places mentioned in
                    Hamilton. XQuery was used to grab the distinct place names and we used a
                GPS Visualizer to obtain the geo co-ordinates in the form of a KML file. Using
                XQuery, a second KML file was produced that contained each place name and the list
                of songs that place appeared in. From there, an XSLT transformation combined the two
                KML files into one, which was uploaded onto Google Maps and embedded on our
                page.
            Bar Graph of Fact, Fiction, and Ambiguity in the Lyrics
            In order to determine the historical accuracy of the musical, we first
                had to select lyrics to investigate. We selected certain lines that raised questions
                of authenticity or suggested further research. After selecting the lyrics, we
                primarily referred to Ron Chernow's biography on Alexander Hamilton that the
                musical's creator, Lin Manuel Miranda, used when writing the musical. After our
                research, the data was formed into a bar graph created using SVG to show the
                percentage of factual, fictional, or ambiguous lyrics.
            Timeline of Hamilton: An American Musical
            As we were interested in the historical accuracy of the musical, we
                decided to look into the specific dates mentioned in the songs. From the dates
                already supplied in the song lyrics, each song was looked over and had relevant
                events mentioned within the lyrics researched. After finding dates or estimations
                for the dates of events, we added a list event element into the XML for each song
                marking up the specific events, dates, and descriptions. Once every song had a list
                event element added, the songs were uploaded to eXistdb and using XQuery we created
                a timeline in SVG. We only grabbed the years in XQuery and created our timeline to
                represent the repeating years as larger circles on the timeline. 
         
        
            WANT TO LEARN MORE?
            For our project we resourced the lyrics from Atlantic
                    Records. The online tools we used to collect information and create
                visualizations for this project include eXistdb, used to
                create the timeline,Cytoscape, used in
                creating network graphs, Voyant, to help
                identify recurring phrases, and GPS
                    Visualizer and Google Maps, to
                create the map. All images were resourced from Google Images.
            In our research regarding historical accuracy, we referred mainly to the biography
                "Alexander Hamilton" by Ron Chernow. The book that inspired Lin-Manuel Miranda to
                write "Hamilton: An American Musical", it was interesting to see what Mirand chose
                to keep historically accurate and what he chose to change in his stage adaption.
            We love Hamilton and have thoroughly enjoyed creating this site
                and discovering new things about the musical. If you're interested in learning more
                than what we have to offer check out these sites which provide more information
                about the musical or analysis of the lyrics: