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Digital Dialogues: What Counts as Contemporary Fiction? Scale, Value, and Field

Digital Dialogues: What Counts as Contemporary Fiction? Scale, Value, and Field

English | Center for Literary and Comparative Studies Tuesday, October 20, 2015 12:30 pm - 2:00 pm McKeldin Library, B0146

A MITH Digital Dialogue
Tuesday, October 20, 12:30
MITH Conference Room, McKeldin Library B0135

Scholars of contemporary fiction face special challenges in making the turn toward digitized corpora and empirical method. Their field is one of exceptionally large and uncertain scale, subject to ongoing transformation and dispute, and shrouded in copyright. I will present one possible way forward, based on my work for a special issue of Modern Language Quarterly on “Scale & Value” that I’m co-editing with Ted Underwood. My project uses quantitative relationships among mid-sized, hand-made datasets to map the field of Anglophone fiction from 1960 to the present. Some significant findings of this research concern a shift in the typical time-setting of the novel and a concomitant change in the relationship between literary commerce and literary prestige.

Click HERE for more information.

 

Add to Calendar 10/20/15 12:30 PM 10/20/15 2:00 PM America/New_York Digital Dialogues: What Counts as Contemporary Fiction? Scale, Value, and Field

A MITH Digital Dialogue
Tuesday, October 20, 12:30
MITH Conference Room, McKeldin Library B0135

Scholars of contemporary fiction face special challenges in making the turn toward digitized corpora and empirical method. Their field is one of exceptionally large and uncertain scale, subject to ongoing transformation and dispute, and shrouded in copyright. I will present one possible way forward, based on my work for a special issue of Modern Language Quarterly on “Scale & Value” that I’m co-editing with Ted Underwood. My project uses quantitative relationships among mid-sized, hand-made datasets to map the field of Anglophone fiction from 1960 to the present. Some significant findings of this research concern a shift in the typical time-setting of the novel and a concomitant change in the relationship between literary commerce and literary prestige.

Click HERE for more information.

 

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