Distant Reading: Difference between revisions

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== Franco Moretti ==
== Franco Moretti ==


Franco Moretti, an Italian literary scholar who worked as Professor of Comparative Literature at Stanford and is now senior advisor at EPFL, is a pioneer of distant reading and published several books and many more articles about it.[https://thepointmag.com/2014/criticism/distant-reading]
'''Franco Moretti''', an Italian literary scholar who worked as Professor of Comparative Literature at Stanford and is now senior advisor at EPFL, is a pioneer of distant reading and published several books and many more articles about it.[https://thepointmag.com/2014/criticism/distant-reading]


As he argues, we need distant reading because close reading does not allow the researcher to uncover the true scope and nature of literature. For example, he holds that a specialist of Victorian fiction litterature might hardly study more than 200 books in depth, whereas 60'000 more novels were published in 19th-century England. The fraction of which would not account for any meaningful study, as the sample size is too small.
As he argues, we need distant reading because close reading does not allow the researcher to uncover the true scope and nature of literature. For example, he holds that a specialist of Victorian fiction litterature might hardly study more than 200 books in depth, whereas 60'000 more novels were published in 19th-century England. The fraction of which would not account for any meaningful study, as the sample size is too small.

Latest revision as of 09:55, 22 September 2017

Distant Reading is a data-centered paradigm of literal analysis which develops as the opposite of close reading, the classical approach to literal analysis. [1]

Distant Reading advocates that analyzing novels as raw data - as opposed to reading them - can yield interesting results. [2]

Franco Moretti

Franco Moretti, an Italian literary scholar who worked as Professor of Comparative Literature at Stanford and is now senior advisor at EPFL, is a pioneer of distant reading and published several books and many more articles about it.[3]

As he argues, we need distant reading because close reading does not allow the researcher to uncover the true scope and nature of literature. For example, he holds that a specialist of Victorian fiction litterature might hardly study more than 200 books in depth, whereas 60'000 more novels were published in 19th-century England. The fraction of which would not account for any meaningful study, as the sample size is too small. [4]

Some of his more radical stances, such as "To understand literature, we must stop reading books", and his general choices in methodology, also brought him a consequent number of criticism from the humanities world. [5]