TU Darmstadt / ULB / TUprints

Measuring Literary Quality. Proxies and Perspectives

Feldkamp, Pascale ; Bizzoni, Yuri ; Lassen, Ida Marie S. ; Thomsen, Mads Rosendahl ; Nielbo, Kristoffer L. (2024)
Measuring Literary Quality. Proxies and Perspectives.
doi: 10.26083/tuprints-00027391
Report, Primary publication, Preprint

[img] Text
3908_LiteraryQuality_Conference_Version.pdf
Copyright Information: CC BY 4.0 International - Creative Commons, Attribution.

Download (2MB)
Item Type: Report
Type of entry: Primary publication
Title: Measuring Literary Quality. Proxies and Perspectives
Language: English
Date: 28 May 2024
Place of Publication: Darmstadt
Issue Number: 1
Series: CCLS2024 Conference Preprints
Series Volume: 3
Collation: 27 Seiten
DOI: 10.26083/tuprints-00027391
Corresponding Links:
Abstract:

Computational studies of literature have adopted approaches from statistics and social sciences to perform large scale studies of fiction, and recent work has sought to approximate the success of literary texts using some proxy for literary quality, such as collections of human judgments, sales-numbers or lists indicating canonicity. However, most quantitative studies of literary quality use one such measure as a golden standard of literary judgement without fully reflecting on what it represents. Conclusions drawn from these studies are nonetheless bound to mirror a particular conception of literary quality associated with the chosen metric. To address this issue, we provide a discussion of the interrelation of various “proxies of literary quality” within a corpus of novels published in the US in the late 19th and 20th century, performing correlations and comparisons across 14 different proxies. We start with a heuristic distinction between expert-based literary judgments, such as those represented by college syllabi and literary anthologies, and crowd-based judgments, such as GoodReads’ ratings, and explore the differences between these and other proxies that fall in-between, such as library holding numbers, prestigious literary prizes, and classics book series. Our findings suggest that works favored in expert-based judgments tend to score lower on GoodReads, while those longlisted for awards tend to score higher and enjoy greater circulation in libraries. Generally, two main kinds of “quality perception” emerge as we map the literary judgment landscape: one associated with canonical literature, and one with more popular literature, which may indicate that judgements of canonicity or literariness are not equal to popularity among readers. Additionally, our study suggests that prestige in genre-literature, as represented by main genre-fiction awards such as the Hugo or World Fantasy Award, constitute distinct proxies on their own, though more closely aligned to popular than canonical proxies.

Uncontrolled Keywords: literary quality, literary success, canonicity, literary culture, computational literary studies, 19th-20th century literature
Status: Preprint
URN: urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-273916
Additional Information:

This paper has been submitted to the conference track of JCLS. It has been peer reviewed and accepted for presentation and discussion at the 3rd Annual Conference of Computational Literary Studies at Vienna, Austria, in June 2024.

Classification DDC: 800 Literature > 800 Literature, rhetoric and criticism
Divisions: 02 Department of History and Social Science > Institut für Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft > Digital Philology – Modern German Literary Studies
Date Deposited: 28 May 2024 07:43
Last Modified: 28 May 2024 07:43
URI: https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/id/eprint/27391
PPN:
Export:
Actions (login required)
View Item View Item