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GIS, texts and images : new approaches.

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GIS, texts and images : new approaches. / Gregory, Ian N.; Cooper, D.; British Academy (Funder).
In: Poetess Archive Journal, Vol. 2, No. 1, 2011.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Gregory, IN, Cooper, D & British Academy (Funder) 2011, 'GIS, texts and images : new approaches.', Poetess Archive Journal, vol. 2, no. 1. <http://paj.muohio.edu/paj/index.php/paj/article/view/20>

APA

Vancouver

Gregory IN, Cooper D, British Academy (Funder). GIS, texts and images : new approaches. Poetess Archive Journal. 2011;2(1).

Author

Gregory, Ian N. ; Cooper, D. ; British Academy (Funder). / GIS, texts and images : new approaches. In: Poetess Archive Journal. 2011 ; Vol. 2, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{05bc899ae68240e89f198ef1b5c3335b,
title = "GIS, texts and images : new approaches.",
abstract = "In this talk, given at the Digital Humanities Conference 2010, we explore how effective Geographical Information Systems (GIS) can be as a tool to help us understand literary geographies and geographies found in other unstructured texts. Much of the paper describes work that maps and spatially analyses the descriptions of two eighteenth-century journeys around the Lake District. These were written by the poets Thomas Gray and Samuel Taylor Coleridge—respectively a proto-Picturesque and a Romantic writer. This explores how GIS can be used to develop our understanding of these relatively short texts and how the writers responded to the landscapes around them. It also explores how image-based data can be added to these. The paper then moves on to explore whether this approach could be applied to a much larger corpus, namely the Lancaster Newsbooks Corpus – 800,000 words taken from surviving seventeenth century newsbooks printed in London. The work we have done suggests that GIS can aid literary studies as a tool for both close and distant reading.",
author = "Gregory, {Ian N.} and D. Cooper and {British Academy (Funder)}",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
journal = "Poetess Archive Journal",
issn = "1935-7362",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - GIS, texts and images : new approaches.

AU - Gregory, Ian N.

AU - Cooper, D.

AU - British Academy (Funder)

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - In this talk, given at the Digital Humanities Conference 2010, we explore how effective Geographical Information Systems (GIS) can be as a tool to help us understand literary geographies and geographies found in other unstructured texts. Much of the paper describes work that maps and spatially analyses the descriptions of two eighteenth-century journeys around the Lake District. These were written by the poets Thomas Gray and Samuel Taylor Coleridge—respectively a proto-Picturesque and a Romantic writer. This explores how GIS can be used to develop our understanding of these relatively short texts and how the writers responded to the landscapes around them. It also explores how image-based data can be added to these. The paper then moves on to explore whether this approach could be applied to a much larger corpus, namely the Lancaster Newsbooks Corpus – 800,000 words taken from surviving seventeenth century newsbooks printed in London. The work we have done suggests that GIS can aid literary studies as a tool for both close and distant reading.

AB - In this talk, given at the Digital Humanities Conference 2010, we explore how effective Geographical Information Systems (GIS) can be as a tool to help us understand literary geographies and geographies found in other unstructured texts. Much of the paper describes work that maps and spatially analyses the descriptions of two eighteenth-century journeys around the Lake District. These were written by the poets Thomas Gray and Samuel Taylor Coleridge—respectively a proto-Picturesque and a Romantic writer. This explores how GIS can be used to develop our understanding of these relatively short texts and how the writers responded to the landscapes around them. It also explores how image-based data can be added to these. The paper then moves on to explore whether this approach could be applied to a much larger corpus, namely the Lancaster Newsbooks Corpus – 800,000 words taken from surviving seventeenth century newsbooks printed in London. The work we have done suggests that GIS can aid literary studies as a tool for both close and distant reading.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

JO - Poetess Archive Journal

JF - Poetess Archive Journal

SN - 1935-7362

IS - 1

ER -