Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 14th June 2025, 06:54:37pm WEST

 
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Session Overview
Session
SP-22
Time:
Thursday, 17/July/2025:
11:00am - 12:30pm

Session Chair: Takehiro Hashimoto, Chuo University
Location: B210 (TB)

60 places

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Presentations

Tracing Transformation: editorial shifts in the Grimm brothers’ tales

Anastasia Glawion1, Dhara Lechner2

1FAU Erlangen Nürnberg, Germany; 2FAU Erlangen Nürnberg, Germany

The presentation showcases first results of a project aimed at representing the editorial transformations of the Children's and Household Tales of the Grimm brothers and demonstrates the variety of changes on several selected fairy tales. It further proposes a first insight into a scalable framework to visualize the editorial changes.



Writing the Routledge Guide to Canadian Literature and Digital Humanities

Paul Barrett

University of Guelph, Canada

In 2024 I coauthored a forthcoming book, The Routledge Guide to Digital Humanities and Canadian Literature. This book presented a number of insights and challegns relevant to anyone attempting to write about the history and practice digital huamnities for a non-specialist audience. In this paper I will present lessons learned.



A Quantitative Approach to Bodily Sensations: Modernist and Realist Authors in Colonial Korea

Jae-Yon Lee1, Hae-in Ji2

1Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, Korea, Republic of (South Korea); 2Academy of Korean Studies, Korea, Republic of (South Korea)

This presentation employs computational stylistics to analyze Yi Sang and Yŏm Sang-sŏp's works from Korea's colonial period. Using a custom sensory classification model, it quantifies stylistic and aesthetic differences with a focus on the body, revealing broader affective politics through characters' physical and psychological responses, extending beyond conventional emotion analysis.



How does war affect Romantic literature? Topic modeling Romantic documents

Takehiro Hashimoto

Chuo University, Japan

This paper examined the relationship between the social situation of war and war writings in the British Romantic period by reviewing the topic modeling results and examining the visualized changes in war topics in books published between 1740 and 1840.



 
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