Description
Book SynopsisEngland’s famed Lake District—best known as the place of inspiration for the Wordsworths, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and other Romantic-era writers—is the locus of this pioneering study, which implements and critiques a new approach to literary analysis in the digital age. Deploying innovative methods from literary studies, corpus linguistics, historical geography, and geographical information science,
Deep Mapping the Literary Lake District combines close readings of a body of writing about the region from 1622-1900 with distant approaches to textual analysis. This path-breaking volume exemplifies interdisciplinarity, demonstrating how digital humanities methodologies and geospatial tools can enhance our appreciation of a region whose topography has been long recognized as fundamental to the shape of the poetry and prose produced within it.
Trade Review"It is rare that one book can influence several disciplines.
Deep Mapping the Literary Lake District is such a title. Taylor and Gregory offer a compelling case for the spatial humanities, and in the process, make valuable contributions to literary studies, geography, history, and cultural studies. A truly innovative work."— David Bodenhamer, co-editor of Deep Maps and Spatial Narratives
“
Deep Mapping the Literary Lake District will quickly become a new standard in the field of literary geography. Its spatial synthesis of aesthetics, Romanticism, sociology, history, literature, and cartography will excite scholars from across the digital-analog divide. I highly recommend the book to every scholar working in these fields, as well as any reader interested in the Lake District and its rich, layered literature and culture."— Ryan Heuser, King's College, Cambridge University
"Taylor and Gregory brilliantly demonstrate how digital techniques developed for work at a wide scale can be employed for the full depth of deep mapping. The result is one of the most exciting demonstrations of the value of computational technologies in literary analysis that I’ve read in a long time."— James Loxley, co-editor of Ben Jonson's Walk to Scotland: An Annotated Edition of the 'Foot Voyage'
Table of ContentsFigures
Tables
Note on the Data
1 Deep Mapping and the Corpus of Lake District Writing
The Distant Reader and the Close: Toward Multiscalar Analysis
The Corpus of Lake District Writing
Corpus Linguistics and Geographic Information Science
Geographical Text Analysis
Deep Mapping as Literary Practice
2 Picturesque Technologies and the Digital Humanities
Specifying in General: Deep Mapping and the Gilpinian Picturesque
The Picturesque in the CLDW
Protest against the Wrong: The Problem with Picturesque Data
Virtual Playgrounds in Text and on Screen
3 Tourists, Travelers, Inhabitants: Variant Digital Literary Geographies
The “Discovery” of the Lake District
Keep Moving: Tourism in the Lakes
Proceeding at Leisure: Traveling in the Lake District
Away from the Show Place: The Inhabitants’ Lakeland
4 Walking in the Literary Lakes
Types of Lake District Walking
Walking along a Good Road: Taking a Lakeland Excursion
“Linger There a Breathing While”: Being a Pedestrian in the Lakes
5 Seeing Sound: Mapping the Lake District’s Soundscape
The Power of Sound, Noise, and Silence
Wordsworthian Listening
How the Water Comes Down: Listening to Waterfalls
The “Most Expensive Luxuries”: Cannon-Fire and English Echoes
6 Digital Cartographies and Personal Geographies: (Re-)Mapping Scafell
Mapping Scafell
Climbing Scafell
The View from the Top
Conclusion: The Future of Deep Mapping
Appendix: The Corpus of Lake District Writing
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index