https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Index ${session.getAttribute("locale")} 5 Open scholarship in Australia: A review of needs, barriers, and opportunities https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:43731 Wed 28 Sep 2022 10:43:59 AEST ]]> Charles Dickens and Joseph Parkinson: disentangling composite authorship in All the Year Round https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:35401 Wed 24 Jul 2019 14:26:32 AEST ]]> Introduction https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:42508 Wed 24 Aug 2022 09:25:29 AEST ]]> Prose, verse and authorship in Dream of the Red Chamber: a stylometric analysis https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:39022 Dream of the Red Chamber (DRC), and discuss the implications for the disputed authorship of the novel. Firstly, we examine the amount of verse in across the chapters of DRC, and compare the style of the verse and prose portions of DRC. Secondly, a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) of DRC is performed based on the prose portions of the novel. Lastly, we discuss the implications of our experimental results for authorship attribution as well as descriptive stylistic analysis of DRC. Our authorial analysis largely confirms the findings of some previous studies that the novel has two authors. Meanwhile, stylistic analyses of the prose portions of the novel yield new and interesting results, which demonstrates that stylometric tools can be used to facilitate descriptive studies of classical Chinese literature.]]> Wed 20 Apr 2022 15:57:11 AEST ]]> Principal components analysis in stylometry https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:55742 Wed 19 Jun 2024 15:31:03 AEST ]]> "Mingled yarn": the state of computing in Shakespeare 2.0 https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:19678 Wed 12 Aug 2015 08:56:17 AEST ]]> Did Dickens write "Temperate Temperance"?: (an attempt to identify authorship of an anonymous article in All the Year Round) https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:14345 Wed 11 Apr 2018 16:34:35 AEST ]]> The Brontë sisters and the Christian Remembrancer: a pilot study in the use of the 'Burrows Method' to identify the authorship of unsigned articles in the nineteenth-century periodical press https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:3674 Wed 11 Apr 2018 16:06:18 AEST ]]> An information theoretic clustering approach for unveiling authorship affinities in Shakespearean era plays and poems https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:16800 Wed 11 Apr 2018 14:17:27 AEST ]]> Shakespeare and print https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:3716 Wed 11 Apr 2018 12:40:31 AEST ]]> Six authors and the Saturday Review: a quantitative approach to style https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:28092 Saturday Review was recognized by Victorians and is often mentioned in modern periodicals scholarship. In this quantitative study, we highlight characteristics that distinguish the journal’s writing from other periodicals in terms of stance rather than political orientation or subject matter. We also compare the writing style of six contributors to the Saturday Review and other periodicals. On one end of the spectrum was George Henry Lewes, who, according to our research, assumed a consistent style when writing for the Saturday Review and any other journal. On the other end of the spectrum was Lord Robert Cecil, whose work for the Saturday Review was strikingly different stylistically than his other writings.]]> Wed 11 Apr 2018 11:10:52 AEST ]]> 'Speak, that I may see thee': Shakespeare characters and common words https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:4443 Wed 11 Apr 2018 10:27:08 AEST ]]> The enigmatic Bartholomew Lloyd alias Frederick Dalton: identity and mobility during the gold rush era in New South Wales https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:46912 Sydney Morning Herald articles on the midnineteenth- century goldfields of New South Wales. Whereas the first two focused on the identification of the anonymous author and his inexplicable disappearance, this article explores the implications of our serendipitous discovery of the author's alter ego. The man we knew as Dalton was actually Bartholomew Lloyd, who had had a very different previous life and a very different ancestry. And it was a name and life he returned to after nearly 30 years. But our story of an eminently respectable citizen who disappeared twice became much more. It took us beyond primarily issues of authorship attribution to important aspects of life in the colonial world of the second half of the nineteenth century. The period was one of extraordinary mobility, internationally and nationally. Mobility facilitated changes and concealment of identity, with their associated issues of responsibility and questionable morality. The story of Lloyd/Dalton is also yet another illustration of the ever-changing nature of historical knowledge.]]> Wed 07 Dec 2022 09:02:31 AEDT ]]> The Shakespearean international yearbook: special section, digital Shakespeares https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:18096 Tue 23 Jun 2015 14:58:56 AEST ]]> Time-layered cultural map of Australia https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:41874 Tue 16 Aug 2022 09:16:16 AEST ]]> Authorship, Computers, and Comparative Style https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:49654 Thu 25 May 2023 15:12:33 AEST ]]> The Authorship of the Occasional Paper (London, 1697-98) https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:51860 Thu 21 Sep 2023 09:41:09 AEST ]]> Changes in the length of speeches in the plays of William Shakespeare and his contemporaries: A mixed models approach https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:51056 Thu 17 Aug 2023 10:19:58 AEST ]]> Language individuation and marker words: Shakespeare and his Maxwell's demon https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:14966 Thu 12 Apr 2018 13:35:44 AEST ]]> Authors and characters https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:16346 Thu 12 Apr 2018 09:08:32 AEST ]]> Shakespeare's style, Shakespeare's England https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:35299 Thu 11 Jul 2019 11:29:20 AEST ]]> AUTHORIAL ATTRIBUTION AND SHAKESPEAREAN VARIETY: GENRE, FORM AND CHRONOLOGY https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:50190 Thu 06 Jul 2023 13:52:40 AEST ]]> Shakespeare's vocabulary: myth and reality https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:31690 Dramatic Works that the playwright "can be complimented only by comparison with himself: all other eulogies are either heterogeneous, (ex. gr. in relation to Milton, Spencer, &c) or flat truisms (ex. gr. to prefer him to Racine, Corneille, or even his own immediate Successors, Fletcher, Massinger &c.)." For Coleridge, to compare Shakespeare to anyone else made little sense. Shakespeare scholarship has continued in full spate since Coleridge's time, and a great deal has changed, but studies which put Shakespeare in the context of his peers as a regular member of a collective playwriting enterprise that together created English Renaissance drama are still the exception rather than the rule. It has been more common to regard him, as Coleridge does, as sui generis. Gary Taylor remarked in 1989 that Shakespeare's fame had made it hard to see his works and the works of others clearly. In gravitational terms, "cultural space-time" is bent by the black-hole-like singularity of his reputation. Taylor cites publications by leading Shakespeare scholars of the day that reflect this sense of Shakespeare's exceptionality: Kenneth Muir's Singularity of Shakespeare and Harry Levin's "Primacy of Shakespeare." More recently, while scholars have viewed the drama of Shakespeare's time much more as a collective enterprise and have questioned the importance of individual authorship in general, the effect has been to downplay all authorial difference and thus to pay less attention to the characteristics of one playwright's output against another's. Perhaps the strongest indicator of a new interest in Shakespeare in relation to his peers is a new wave of strictly attributive studies in the past decade.]]> Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:44:23 AEDT ]]> Shakespeare and other English Renaissance authors as characterized by Information Theory complexity quantifiers https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:7067 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:38:03 AEDT ]]> Introduction https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:8492 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:37:40 AEDT ]]> Shakespeare, computers and the mystery of authorship https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:8312 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:36:51 AEDT ]]> Methods https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:8502 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:36:25 AEDT ]]> The three parts of Henry VI https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:8500 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:36:25 AEDT ]]> The 1602 additions to The Spanish tragedy https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:8501 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:36:24 AEDT ]]> Exploring the potential for corpus-based research in speech-language pathology https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:8618 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:35:42 AEDT ]]> Old spellings, new methods: automated procedures for indeterminate linguistic data https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:9574 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:34:46 AEDT ]]> Shakespeare and print https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:1975 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:33:17 AEDT ]]> 'She learned romance as she grew older': Persuasion as the 'natural sequel' to Sense & Sensibility https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:1332 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:32:33 AEDT ]]> Lucy Hutchinson and the authorship of two seventeenth-century poems: a computational approach https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:1333 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:32:33 AEDT ]]> 'An image of the times': Ben Jonson's revision of Every Man in his Humour https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:1331 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:32:32 AEDT ]]> Stylistic analysis and authorship studies https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:2256 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:27:15 AEDT ]]> The Quest for "Cardenio": Shakespeare, Fletcher, Cervantes, and the lost play ed. by David Carnegie and Gary Taylor (review) https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:14117 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:26:02 AEDT ]]> Style, statistics and new models of authorship https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:11000 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:12:40 AEDT ]]> Who wrote 'A Visit to the Western Goldfields'?: Using computers to analyse language in historical research https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:18244 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:04:32 AEDT ]]> Shakespeare's foreign worlds: national and transnational identities in the Elizabethan Age [Review] https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:18279 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:04:32 AEDT ]]> Language chunking, data sparseness, and the value of a long marker list: explorations with word n-grams and authorial attribution https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:20570 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:02:38 AEDT ]]> A and an in English Plays, 1580-1639 https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:17284 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:01:48 AEDT ]]> Authorship https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:16623 Sat 24 Mar 2018 08:00:59 AEDT ]]> Propositional Idea Density in aphasic discourse https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:18476 Sat 24 Mar 2018 07:59:43 AEDT ]]> Propositional idea density in women's written language over the lifespan: computerized analysis https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:17241 Sat 24 Mar 2018 07:59:14 AEDT ]]> George Chapman, John Davies of Hereford, William Shakespeare, and A Lover's Complaint https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:16443 Sat 24 Mar 2018 07:51:12 AEDT ]]> Propositional idea density in older men's written language: findings from the HIMS study using computerised analysis https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:26781 Sat 24 Mar 2018 07:36:21 AEDT ]]> Identifying another goldfields reporter: Frederick Dalton (1815-80) https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:28094 Sydney Morning Herald in the early 1860s were by the same author. Following a strong suggestion that this mystery author may have been Frederick Dalton, writings known to be by him were incorporated into the analysis. Since the only known writings of Dalton (until now) were mining reports, the stylistic analysis tests involved the comparison of writings in different genres. As well as a reporter, Dalton was a miner and geologist, in California as well as Australia, and subsequently a gold commissioner and mining warden in New South Wales. The identification of Dalton’s considerable goldfields writings has enabled us to learn more of one of the pioneers of gold mining in New South Wales.]]> Sat 24 Mar 2018 07:25:01 AEDT ]]> Shakespeare and print https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:4165 Sat 24 Mar 2018 07:21:00 AEDT ]]> Language and ageing - exploring propositional density in written language - stability over time https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:22268 Sat 24 Mar 2018 07:17:43 AEDT ]]> Multiple regression techniques for modelling dates of first performances of Shakespeare-era plays https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:50777 Sat 05 Aug 2023 10:05:34 AEST ]]> More than an Amanuensis: Ernestine Hill’s Contribution to The Passing of the Aborigines https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:44205 Mon 10 Oct 2022 15:49:38 AEDT ]]> A collaboration about a collaboration: the authorship of King Henry VI, Part Three https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:15589 Mon 09 Apr 2018 09:40:07 AEST ]]> Supplementary materials for Shakespeare and Authorship Attribution https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:35647 Fri 27 Sep 2019 15:50:54 AEST ]]> A novel clustering methodology based on modularity optimisation for detecting authorship affinities in Shakespearean era plays https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:29463 th and 17th centuries), to analyze and detect clusters of similar plays. Experimental results and comparison with state-of-the-art clustering methods demonstrate the remarkable performance of our new method for identifying high quality clusters which reflect the commonalities in the literary style of the plays.]]> Fri 24 Jul 2020 15:16:02 AEST ]]> Play corpus details and a list of verb forms https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:36116 Fri 07 Feb 2020 16:33:06 AEDT ]]> Style, computers, and early modern drama: beyond authorship https://nova.newcastle.edu.au/vital/access/ /manager/Repository/uon:32412 Fri 01 Jun 2018 10:03:07 AEST ]]>