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E-grāmata: Literary Mapping in the Digital Age

Edited by (University of Chester, UK), Edited by (Lancaster University, UK), Edited by
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Drawing on the expertise of leading researchers from around the globe, this pioneering collection of essays explores how geospatial technologies are revolutionizing the discipline of literary studies. The book offers the first intensive examination of digital literary cartography, a field whose recent and rapid development has yet to be coherently analysed. This collection not only provides an authoritative account of the current state of the field, but also informs a new generation of digital humanities scholars about the critical and creative potentials of digital literary mapping. The book showcases the work of exemplary literary mapping projects and provides the reader with an overview of the tools, techniques and methods those projects employ.
List of Figures
viii
List of Plates
xi
List of Tables
xiii
List of Contributors
xiv
Series Preface xvi
Acknowledgments xviii
Introduction: Rethinking Literary Mapping 1(22)
David Cooper
Christopher Donaldson
Patricia Murrieta-Flores
PART I Mapping Methods: Systems, Approaches and Innovations
23(100)
1 Mapping the Emotions of London in Fiction, 1700--1900: A Crowdsourcing Experiment
25(22)
Ryan Heuser
Mark Algee-Hewitt
Annalise Lockhart
Erik Steiner
Van Tran
2 The Digital Poetics of Place-Names in Literary Edinburgh
47(20)
Miranda Anderson
James Loxley
3 Geographical Text Analysis: Digital Cartographies of Lake District Literature
67(21)
Ian Gregory
Christopher Donaldson
4 Mapping Fiction: The Theories, Tools and Potentials of Literary Cartography
88(14)
Barbara Piatti
5 Bloomsday's Big Data: GIS, Social Media and James Joyce's Ulysses
102(21)
Charles Travis
PART II Mapping Practices: Places, Writers and Readers
123(82)
6 Mapping Fiction: Spatialising the Literary Work
125(22)
Sally Bushell
7 The Spatial Practices of Writing: Arnold Bennett and the Possibilities of Literary GIS
147(14)
Angharad Saunders
8 Between `Distant' and `Deep' Digital Mapping: Walking the Plotlines of Cardiff's Literary Geographies
161(21)
Jon Anderson
9 The Cestrian Book of the Dead: A Necrogeographic Survey of the Dee Estuary
182(23)
Les Roberts
PART III Mapping Futures: Collecting, Curating and Creating
205(92)
10 Making the Invisible Visible: Place, Spatial Stories and Deep Maps
207(14)
David J. Bodenhamer
11 From Mapping Text in Space to Experiencing Text in Place: Exploring Literary Virtual Geographies
221(19)
Trevor M. Harris
H. Frank Lafone
Dan Bonenberger
12 Spatial Frames of Reference for Literature Through Geospatial Technologies
240(18)
Gary Priestnall
13 Geovisuality: Literary Implications
258(18)
Tania Rossetto
14 `Setting the globe to spin': Digital Mapping and Contemporary Literary Culture
276(21)
David Cooper
Index 297
David Cooper is Senior Lecturer in English Literature at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK, Christopher Donaldson is a Lecturer in Romanticism at the University of Birmingham, UK and Patricia Murrieta-Flores is Director of the Digital Humanities Research Centre at the University of Chester, UK