Speakers, in alphabetical order
Kirsten Belgum (University of Texas) (more information)
"Distant Reception: Bringing German Books to America "
Tobias Boes (University of Notre Dame) (more information)
"The Vocations of the Novel: Distant Reading Occupational Change in Nineteenth-Century German Literature"
Matt Erlin (Washington University in St. Louis) (more information)
"The Location of Literary History: Topic Modeling and the German Novel, 1731-1864"
Jonathan Hess (UNC Chapel Hill) (more information)
"Distant Reading and the Study of Nineteenth-Century German-Jewish Culture"
Fotis Jannidis (Universität Würzburg) (more information)
"Mapping the Narrative? A Corpus-Based Study of the German Novel from 1700 to 1900"
Lutz Koepnick (Washington University in St. Louis) (more information)
"Can Computers Read?"
Todd Kontje (University of California, San Diego) (more information)
"The Case for Close Reading after the Descriptive Turn"
Gerhard Lauer (Universität Göttingen) (more information)
"Calculating Literature. First Steps Toward a Computer-Based Analysis of Nineteenth-Century German Novels"
Peter McIsaac (University of Michagan) (more information)
"Rethinking Non-Fiction: A Digital Humanities Approach to the Nineteenth-Century Science-Literature Divide"
Katja Mellmann (Universität Göttingen) (more information)
"'Detoured Reading': Understanding Literature through its Contemporary Reception. Case Studies in Nineteenth-Century German Novels"
Nicolas Pethes (Ruhr-Universität Bochum) (more information)
"Serial Individuality: Case Study Collections around 1800"
Andrew Piper (McGill University) (more information)
"The Werther Effect: Topologies of German Literature, 1774-1832"
Allen Beye Riddell (Duke University) (more information)
"How to Read 16,700 Journal Articles: Studying Nineteenth-Century German Studies Using Topic Models"
Lynne 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)"
Paul Youngman (University of North Carolina, Charlotte) (more information)
"Black Devil and Iron Angel Revisited: N-Gramming the Railway in 19th Century German Fiction"