Irish Minerva Writers and the Affordances of Big Data: Some Preliminary Findings
This article explores how big data – or very large collections of data that are too extensive to be evaluated in any meaningful way by conventional literary analysis – and machine learning can help us to recover the cultural impact of Irish-authored texts published by London’s Minerva Press, the most prolific – and critically decried – publisher of popular fiction in Romantic-era Britain. In particular, it outlines how Named-Entity Recognition and Natural Language Processing can facilitate an analysis of intertextual references to Minerva’s Irish-authored works in the British Library’s open access Nineteenth-Century Literature Dataset, which comprises approximately 68,000 digitized volumes of text originally published between 1789 and 1900. Identifying and exploring these allusions helps to reveal the ongoing influence of Minerva texts in the long nineteenth century despite critical condemnation both then and now. Quantitative data invites qualitative exploration of authorial engagement with these publications and with the Minerva Press more generally in nineteenth-century Anglophone literature. In this, the article argues, machine learning provides a useful tool in recovering the network of textual relations fundamentally linked to Minerva’s Irish writers and indicative of their long-lasting impact – both negatively and positively construed – on literary production of the period.
History
Publication
Irish University Press, 2023, 53 (1), pp. 27-47Publisher
Edinburgh University PressOther Funding information
Partially funded by an Enterprise Ireland's Horizon Europe ERC support grant.Rights
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Edinburgh University Press in the Irish University Review. The Version of Record is available online at: http://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/iur.2023.0588Sustainable development goals
- (4) Quality Education
External identifier
Department or School
- Scoil na Gaeilge, an Bhéarla, agus na Cumarsáide | School of English, Irish, and Communication