Machine generated contents note: 1. Methods; 2. Prose and verse: sometimes 'transparent', sometimes meeting with 'a jolt'; 3. Sisters under the skin: character and style; 4. Stage properties: bed, blood, and beyond; 5. 'Novelty carries it away': cultural drift; 6. Authorship, company style, and horror vacui; 7. Restoration plays and 'the giant race, before the flood'.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
"Hugh Craig and Brett Greatley-Hirsch extend the computational analysis introduced in Shakespeare, Computers, and the Mystery of Authorship (edited by Hugh Craig and Arthur F. Kinney; Cambridge, 2009) beyond problems of authorship attribution to address broader issues of literary history. Using new methods to answer long-standing questions and challenge traditional assumptions about the underlying patterns and contrasts in the plays of Shakespeare and his contemporaries, Style, Computers, and Early Modern Drama sheds light on, for example, different linguistic usages between plays written in verse and prose, company styles and different character types. As a shift from a canonical survey to a corpus-based literary history founded on a statistical analysis of language, this book represents a fundamentally new approach to the study of English Renaissance literature and proposes a new model and rationale for future computational scholarship in early modern literary studies"--
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Entry Element
English drama
Entry Element
نمایشنامه انگلیسی
Topical Subdivision
-- History and Criticism
Topical Subdivision
-- تاریخ و نقد
Chronological Subdivision
-- Early modern and Elizabethan, 1500 - 1600
Chronological Subdivision
-- قرن ۱۶م.
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a01
Literary style-- Statistical methods.
English literature-- Research-- Statistical methods.
Theater and society-- England-- History-- 16th century.