Speakers

Speakers, in alphabetical order

  • speakerKirsten Belgum (University of Texas) (more information)
    "Distant Reception: Bringing German Books to America "
  • speakerTobias Boes (University of Notre Dame) (more information)
    "The Vocations of the Novel: Distant Reading Occupational Change in Nineteenth-Century German Literature"
  • speakerMatt Erlin (Washington University in St. Louis) (more information)
    "The Location of Literary History: Topic Modeling and the German Novel, 1731-1864"
  • speakerJonathan Hess (UNC Chapel Hill) (more information)
    "Distant Reading and the Study of Nineteenth-Century German-Jewish Culture"
  • speakerFotis Jannidis (Universität Würzburg) (more information)
    "Mapping the Narrative? A Corpus-Based Study of the German Novel from 1700 to 1900"
  • speakerLutz Koepnick (Washington University in St. Louis) (more information)
    "Can Computers Read?"
  • speakerTodd Kontje (University of California, San Diego) (more information)
    "The Case for Close Reading after the Descriptive Turn"
  • speakerGerhard Lauer (Universität Göttingen) (more information)
    "Calculating Literature. First Steps Toward a Computer-Based Analysis of Nineteenth-Century German Novels"
  • speakerPeter McIsaac (University of Michagan) (more information)
    "Rethinking Non-Fiction: A Digital Humanities Approach to the Nineteenth-Century Science-Literature Divide"
  • speakerKatja Mellmann (Universität Göttingen) (more information)
    "'Detoured Reading': Understanding Literature through its Contemporary Reception. Case Studies in Nineteenth-Century German Novels"
  • speakerNicolas Pethes (Ruhr-Universität Bochum) (more information)
    "Serial Individuality: Case Study Collections around 1800"
  • speakerAndrew Piper (McGill University) (more information)
    "The Werther Effect: Topologies of German Literature, 1774-1832"
  • speakerAllen Beye Riddell (Duke University) (more information)
    "How to Read 16,700 Journal Articles: Studying Nineteenth-Century German Studies Using Topic Models"
  • speakerLynne Tatlock (Washington University in St. Louis) (more information)
    "The One and the Many: The Old Mam'selle's Secret and the American Traffic in German Fiction (1868-1917)"
  • speakerPaul Youngman (University of North Carolina, Charlotte) (more information)
    "Black Devil and Iron Angel Revisited: N-Gramming the Railway in 19th Century German Fiction"

©2011 The Department of Germanic Languages & Literatures

logo