TY - JOUR
T1 - Cultural Capitals
T2 - Modeling 'Minor' European Literature
AU - Erlin, Matt
AU - Piper, Andrew
AU - Knox, Douglas
AU - Pentecost, Stephen
AU - Drouillard, Michaela
AU - Powell, Brian
AU - Townson, Cienna
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, McGill University. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Conceived against the backdrop of ongoing debates regarding the status of national literary traditions in world literature, this essay offers a computational analysis of how national attention is distributed in contemporary fiction across multiple national contexts. Building on the work of Pascale Casanova, we ask how different national literatures engage with national themes and whether this engagement can be linked to one's position within a global cultural hierarchy. Our data consists of digital editions of 200 works of prize-winning fiction, divided into four subcorpora of equal size: U.S.-American, French, German, and a collection of novels drawn from 19 different "minor" European languages. We ultimately find no evidence to support Casanova's theory that minor literatures are more nationalistic than literature produced within major cultural capitals. Indeed, the evidence points to the exact opposite effect: All three of the models we employ suggest that novels written in more minor languages tend to be significantly less nationalistically focused than those written in European centres like France or Germany. Nevertheless our data do confirm Casanova's larger hypothesis of the existence of visible stylistic effects associated with a book's location within a global cultural hierarchy of languages.
AB - Conceived against the backdrop of ongoing debates regarding the status of national literary traditions in world literature, this essay offers a computational analysis of how national attention is distributed in contemporary fiction across multiple national contexts. Building on the work of Pascale Casanova, we ask how different national literatures engage with national themes and whether this engagement can be linked to one's position within a global cultural hierarchy. Our data consists of digital editions of 200 works of prize-winning fiction, divided into four subcorpora of equal size: U.S.-American, French, German, and a collection of novels drawn from 19 different "minor" European languages. We ultimately find no evidence to support Casanova's theory that minor literatures are more nationalistic than literature produced within major cultural capitals. Indeed, the evidence points to the exact opposite effect: All three of the models we employ suggest that novels written in more minor languages tend to be significantly less nationalistically focused than those written in European centres like France or Germany. Nevertheless our data do confirm Casanova's larger hypothesis of the existence of visible stylistic effects associated with a book's location within a global cultural hierarchy of languages.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85127436677
U2 - 10.22148/001c.21182
DO - 10.22148/001c.21182
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85127436677
SN - 2371-4549
VL - 6
JO - Journal of Cultural Analytics
JF - Journal of Cultural Analytics
IS - 1
ER -