Saturday, July 17, 2010

London Nerd Tourism

Last night I was thinking about Douglas Adams' bathtub and I realized I should post about the few touristy things I had time to do while I was in London.

-I visited the National Portrait Gallery and said hello to the Romantic poets, who first induced me to really enjoy studying English. NB: air-conditioned!

-I went on a bat walk. This was exciting for a number of reasons, not least of which was meeting my fellow Batwalkers (distant cousins of the Skywalkers). Also, they hand out bat detectors and keep some sample bats on hand for demonstration purposes. Finally, you get to walk through British parks at night, which is apparently a huge subversive thrill. But the highlight is the audio from the bat detectors, which lend a whole new dimension to the experience.

-I had lunch with my friend Scott at Google's London offices. The major highlight for me was to brush a hand over Douglas Adams' bathtub, which now resides among a forest of deck chairs. Baths are, needless to say, very important in the Hitchhiker's Guide mythos. This one looked sleek and self-satisfied, as if it quietly devoured an AdSense salesperson once every week or two.

-I saw Keats House, the cottage where he fell in love with Fanny Brawne, moved from persistently to gravely ill, and wrote some fine poetry. They've even got the (replacement) tree under which he composed Ode to a Nightingale, a poem that presages the entirety of Yeats in eighty lines.

All in all, a great trip!

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Back to work

I returned from London on Monday and have been slowly gearing back up into work mode. DH2010 was a great conference experience and I met a lot of people I'm hoping to keep in touch with. I think my talk went pretty well and it seems like more people are doing work similar to mine this year, which is comforting.

And, since Digital Humanities is such an impressively techie and well-organized affair, they've already got an audio interview that I did right after my talk posted online. I understand that more materials from the conference will be posted on arts-humanities.net in the days to come; it would be great if they post slides from presentations that I missed. It will have to console us until next year's conference...at Stanford!

Thursday, July 8, 2010

London Dispatch

I've once again fallen way behind in my blogging, but fortunately I have much to report. I'm writing from Digital Humanities 2010, where I'll be presenting my latest research on Saturday. The conference is in London and it's been exciting and a little befuddling to wrestle jet-lag amidst an exciting array of panels and posters.

The paper I'm giving is on Toni Morrison, the subject of the recently completed Chapter 2. It's in its fourth iteration now, after a trial run among the friendly brains at Stanford and great panels at ASU's Southwest English Grad Students conference and ACLA. At each point I've been refining my methodologies and slides (lesson one: visualization is endlessly finicky).

As before, this is a case study where Morrison's work is really a jumping-off point for an exploration of her reading publics and the nature of literary fame. When I presented at DH2009, I was still working out how to approach these questions and adopted a kind of shotgun strategy, using every data set and methodology I could think of to see what worked. That paper, on Thomas Pynchon, had a lot going on: networks of Amazon recommendations; Wordle images based on word counts of book reviews; bar graphs of library copies; graphs of MLA citations and comparisons of MLA, Amazon and newsgroup publications by year.

Most of these ideas were interesting, but only some of them 'stuck' for me. The cyclical nature of academic and other kinds of publication, for example, was revealing to see but a point that probably only needs to be proven once. This year I've decided to focus on the richest results from the past and push the envelope. My paper will look at the social lives of Morrison's novels, and the 'social' networks they inhabit online. I've worked hard in the past year to create collocation-based networks and to use network analysis to identify the most significant nodes and clusters in Morrison's ideational networks online. These are the most interesting, and the messiest, of my datasets, and network analysis has revealed some surprising patterns that I'll be sharing on Saturday.

So that's the major news. I have a couple of other projects cooking that I'm going to write up when I have some solid bulletins to report.