Weimer, Anna Mareike ; Barth, Florian ; Dönicke, Tillmann ; Gödeke, Luisa ; Varachkina, Hanna ; Holler, Anke ; Sporleder, Caroline ; Gittel, Benjamin (2023)
The (In-)Consistency of Literary Concepts. Operationalising, Annotating and Detecting Literary Comment.
In: Journal of Computational Literary Studies, 2022, 1 (1)
doi: 10.26083/tuprints-00023260
Article, Secondary publication, Publisher's Version
There is a more recent version of this item available. |
Text
jcls-90-weimer.pdf Copyright Information: CC BY 4.0 International - Creative Commons, Attribution. Download (225kB) |
|
Text
jcls-90-weimer.xml Copyright Information: CC BY 4.0 International - Creative Commons, Attribution. Download (162kB) |
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Type of entry: | Secondary publication |
Title: | The (In-)Consistency of Literary Concepts. Operationalising, Annotating and Detecting Literary Comment |
Language: | English |
Date: | 21 February 2023 |
Place of Publication: | Darmstadt |
Year of primary publication: | 2022 |
Publisher: | Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Darmstadt |
Journal or Publication Title: | Journal of Computational Literary Studies |
Volume of the journal: | 1 |
Issue Number: | 1 |
Collation: | 25 Seiten |
DOI: | 10.26083/tuprints-00023260 |
Corresponding Links: | |
Origin: | Secondary publication from TUjournals |
Abstract: | This paper explores how both annotation procedures and automatic detection (i.e. classifiers) can be used to assess the consistency of textual literary concepts. We developed an annotation tagset for the ‘literary comment’ – a frequently used but rarely defined concept – and its subtypes (interpretative comment, attitude comment and metanarrative/metafictional comment) and trained a multi-output and a binary classifier. The multi-output classifier shows F-scores of 28% for attitude comment, 36% for interpretative comment and 48% for meta comment, whereas the binary classifier achieves F-scores up to 59%. Crucially, both our annotation and the automatic classification struggle with the same subtypes of comment, although annotation and classification follow completely different procedures. Our findings suggest an inconsistency in the overall literary concept ‘comment’ and most prominently the subtypes ‘attitude comment’ and ‘interpretative comment’. As a best-practice-example, our approach illustrates that the contribution of Digital Humanities to Literary Studies may go beyond the automatic recognition of literary phenomena. |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | literary theory, narratology, commentary, operationalisation, annotation, supervised machine learning |
Status: | Publisher's Version |
URN: | urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-232602 |
Additional Information: | Urspr. Konferenzveröffentlichung/Originally conference publication: 1st Annual Conference of Computational Literary Studies, 01.-02.06.2022, Darmstadt, Germany |
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: | 21 Feb 2023 10:30 |
Last Modified: | 05 Feb 2024 13:05 |
URI: | https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/id/eprint/23260 |
PPN: | |
Export: |
Available Versions of this Item
- The (In-)Consistency of Literary Concepts. Operationalising, Annotating and Detecting Literary Comment. (deposited 21 Feb 2023 10:30) [Currently Displayed]
View Item |