RE: [Corpora-List] Stylistics and corpus linguistics

From: Ute Römer (ute.roemer@uni-koeln.de)
Date: Thu May 27 2004 - 08:57:32 MET DST

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    Dear Martin and others,

    > What I am thinking of is principally linguistic studies of literature
    > which
    > make use of corpora or corpus linguistics techniques.

    That's a very interesting topic indeed. Last October I attended a conference
    at Trier University entitled "Reconciling 'Anglistik': Didactic Strategies
    for an Interdisciplinary Approach to Literature, Linguistics and Cultural
    Studies", which raised related issues. There will be a volume of proceedings
    edited by Andrea Gerbig and Anja Müller-Wood, to be published with Edwin
    Mellen Press next year. The title will be "Rethinking English: Reconciling
    Literature, Linguistics and Cultural Studies" and it will include papers by
    Beatrix Busse (on Shakespearean drama) and Michael Stubbs (on Joseph
    Conrad's Heart of Darkness if I remember correctly) which stress the
    importance of corpus-analytic/quantitative approaches to literature.

    I am also writing a chapter for the book focussing on "corpus literacy" as a
    key literacy in English Studies in general (not only in linguistics) and
    dealing with the application of corpus analytic methods in linguistics,
    didactics, and literary & cultural studies (I will possibly include a case
    study on a corpus-driven approach to irony and humour in Jane Austen's
    novels that one of my Cologne students carried out; she obtained some
    remarkable results on the basis of a Jane Austen novels corpus and a larger
    reference corpus of 18th/19th century English novels). For my paper I would
    also be grateful for further pointers to important studies on the interface
    of corpus linguistics and literary analysis. Thanks!

    All the best... Ute

    >
    > Examples of this would be:
    > - studies which have compared a given feature in a literary text with its
    > usage in a reference corpus, possibly to identify and/or quantify
    > deviation
    > from non-literary norms;
    > - adding annotation of linguistic categories in electronic literary texts;
    > - construction of corpora of literary texts.
    >
    > I am arbitrarily excluding:
    > - stylometry and authorship studies
    > - literary concordances (which don't do any more than that)
    > - linguistic studies of a literary text which happen to have used an
    > electronic text or computational techniques, but not a corpus or anything
    > normally understood as a corpus linguistic technique.
    >
    > Thanks for any pointers.
    >
    > __
    > Martin Wynne
    > Head of the Oxford Text Archive and
    > AHDS Literature, Languages and Linguistics
    >
    > Oxford University Computing Services
    > 13 Banbury Road
    > Oxford
    > UK - OX2 6NN
    > Tel: +44 1865 283299
    > Fax: +44 1865 273275
    > martin.wynne@ota.ahds.ac.uk



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