W1 corpus pour — Folkways: A Study of the Sociological Importance of Usages, Manners, Customs, Mores, and Morals
receipt:work:folkways · vw1 · ingest_verified
sha256 82947e8d80143a0dc7d60dc9c6b8b6a5c4bc8b761c0d025a6b6a68fa097e6c0d
A receipt records what the house consulted and what it did not establish. The open state is part of the record, not a defect in it.
What this covers
1works · 20episodes · 1shelves
Sources consulted
- William Graham Sumner, Folkways (1906; Project Gutenberg #24253)Project Gutenberg #24253 plain-text UTF-8 transcription of the 1906 editionlicense: Public Domainpinned: sha256 2f63962897dd88d8529edf194e30f70d2732001215b43ad1a280b2fb1392cd91
What this shows
20 episodes of "Folkways: A Study of the Sociological Importance of Usages, Manners, Customs, Mores, and Morals" were segmented from the sha256-pinned source file, poured, and count- and hash-verified against this database by direct query. The receipt's content_hash is sha256("anthropoi-work-pour-v1|" + work.id + "|episodes=" + N + "|" + the comma-joined episode text_sha256 values in ordinal order) — recomputable by anyone from SELECTs on this record.
What this does not prove- That the segmentation reflects a scholarly apparatus — episodes follow this edition's own headings.
- That OCR-derived text is error-free — see each episode's audit_state (ocr_uncorrected is carried honestly).
- That the work's claims are true — ingestion verifies text integrity and provenance, not anthropology.
- Anything about passages of this work not present in these episodes (front matter and indexes are excluded by documented rules).