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Implications of vocabulary density for poetry: Reading T. S. Eliot's poetry through computational methods

Authors
Kim, SeonghoonTak, Jin-youngKwak, Eun JooLim, Tae YunLee, Shin Haeng
Issue Date
Jun-2021
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Citation
DIGITAL SCHOLARSHIP IN THE HUMANITIES, v.36, no.2, pp.371 - 382
Journal Title
DIGITAL SCHOLARSHIP IN THE HUMANITIES
Volume
36
Number
2
Start Page
371
End Page
382
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hongik/handle/2020.sw.hongik/24364
DOI
10.1093/llc/fqaa009
ISSN
2055-7671
Abstract
By incorporating computational methods into reading literary texts, this study examines the literary implications of the 'vocabulary density' and frequency of nouns and adjectives in T. S. Eliot's poetry. This study analyzes 4,689,655 words from forty-seven poets available on Project Gutenberg, a catalog spanning from the eighteenth century to the early twentieth century. The data illustrate both the continuity and discontinuity found in English and American poetry dependent on conventional divisions between literary movements: eighteenth century, Romanticism, Imagism, and Modernism. The findings shed light on the similarities and differences between Eliot's poetry and others', particularly in terms of Franco Moretti's concept of 'modern epic' and his methodology of 'distant reading'. Through this combined quantitative and qualitative research, this article ultimately upholds the notion that the linguistic distinction of Eliot's high modernist poetry lies, by and large, in his use of invented and equivocal words that reflects and represents an artistic response to modern human, cultural, social conditions, and experiment with poetic diction and polyphonic voice in the early twentieth century.
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