Wilkens, Matthew ; Evans, Elizabeth F. ; Soni, Sandeep ; Bamman, David ; Piper, Andrew (2024)
Small Worlds. Measuring the Mobility of Characters in English-Language Fiction.
doi: 10.26083/tuprints-00027393
Report, Erstveröffentlichung, Preprint
Kurzbeschreibung (Abstract)
The representation of mobility in literary narratives has important implications for the cultural understanding of human movement and migration. In this paper, we introduce novel methods for measuring the physical mobility of literary characters through narrative space and time. We capture mobility through geographically defined space, as well as through generic locations such as homes, driveways, and forests. Using a dataset of over 13,000 books published in English since 1789, we observe significant “small world” effects in fictional narratives. Specifically, we find that fictional characters cover far less distance than their non-fictional counterparts; the pathways covered by fictional characters are highly formulaic and limited from a global perspective; and fiction exhibits a distinctive semantic investment in domestic and private places. Surprisingly, we do not find that characters’ ascribed gender has a statistically significant effect on distance traveled, but it does influence the semantics of domesticity.
Typ des Eintrags: | Report |
---|---|
Erschienen: | 2024 |
Autor(en): | Wilkens, Matthew ; Evans, Elizabeth F. ; Soni, Sandeep ; Bamman, David ; Piper, Andrew |
Art des Eintrags: | Erstveröffentlichung |
Titel: | Small Worlds. Measuring the Mobility of Characters in English-Language Fiction |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Publikationsjahr: | 28 Mai 2024 |
Ort: | Darmstadt |
(Heft-)Nummer: | 1 |
Reihe: | CCLS2024 Conference Preprints |
Band einer Reihe: | 3 |
Kollation: | 16 Seiten |
DOI: | 10.26083/tuprints-00027393 |
URL / URN: | https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/27393 |
Zugehörige Links: | |
Kurzbeschreibung (Abstract): | The representation of mobility in literary narratives has important implications for the cultural understanding of human movement and migration. In this paper, we introduce novel methods for measuring the physical mobility of literary characters through narrative space and time. We capture mobility through geographically defined space, as well as through generic locations such as homes, driveways, and forests. Using a dataset of over 13,000 books published in English since 1789, we observe significant “small world” effects in fictional narratives. Specifically, we find that fictional characters cover far less distance than their non-fictional counterparts; the pathways covered by fictional characters are highly formulaic and limited from a global perspective; and fiction exhibits a distinctive semantic investment in domestic and private places. Surprisingly, we do not find that characters’ ascribed gender has a statistically significant effect on distance traveled, but it does influence the semantics of domesticity. |
Freie Schlagworte: | fiction, mobility, geospatial analysis, narratology |
Status: | Preprint |
URN: | urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-273936 |
Zusätzliche Informationen: | This paper has been submitted to the conference track of JCLS. It has been peer reviewed and accepted for presentation and discussion at the 3rd Annual Conference of Computational Literary Studies at Vienna, Austria, in June 2024. |
Sachgruppe der Dewey Dezimalklassifikatin (DDC): | 800 Literatur > 800 Literatur, Rhetorik, Literaturwissenschaft |
Fachbereich(e)/-gebiet(e): | 02 Fachbereich Gesellschafts- und Geschichtswissenschaften > Institut für Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft > Digital Philology - Neuere deutsche Literaturwissenschaft 02 Fachbereich Gesellschafts- und Geschichtswissenschaften 02 Fachbereich Gesellschafts- und Geschichtswissenschaften > Institut für Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft |
Hinterlegungsdatum: | 28 Mai 2024 07:46 |
Letzte Änderung: | 03 Jun 2024 10:34 |
PPN: | |
Export: | |
Suche nach Titel in: | TUfind oder in Google |
Frage zum Eintrag |
Optionen (nur für Redakteure)
Redaktionelle Details anzeigen |