Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-cjp7w Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-21T17:57:08.587Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Part VII - Scales, Polysystems, Canons

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 August 2021

Debjani Ganguly
Affiliation:
University of Virginia
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

Amossy, Ruth. 1989. “Types ou stéréotypes? Les ‘Physiologies’ et la littérature industrielle” [Types or Stereotypes? The “Physiologies” and Industrial Literature], Romantisme, No. 64: 113–23.Google Scholar
Annenkov, P. V. 1983. “Pis’ma iz-za granitsy” [Letters from Abroad]. In Parizhskie pis’ma [Parisian Letters], ed. Konobeevskaia, I. N. . Nauka, 583.Google Scholar
Anon. 1843 .“Literaturnaia letopis’” [Literary Chronicle]. Biblioteka dlia chteniia [Library for Reading], no. 57, Мarch-April, Section VI, p. 16.Google Scholar
Avermaete, Tom, Karakayali, Serhat, and von Osten, Marion, eds. 2010. Black Dog Publishing.Google Scholar
Bakhtin, Mikhail. 1975. “Epos i roman: O metodologii issledovaniia romana” [Epic and Novel: On the Methodology of Researching the Novel]. Voprosy literatury i èstetiki: Issledovaniia raznykh let [Questions of Literature and Aesthetics: Investigations from Various Years]. Khudozhestvennaia literatura, 447–83.Google Scholar
Balzac, Honoré de. 1938. “Physiologie gastronomique” [Gastronomical Physiology]. In Oeuvres complètes [Complete Works], Vol. 39 . Conard.Google Scholar
Balzac, Honoré de 1840. “Avant-propos à la Comédie humaine” [Foreword to the Human Comedy]. In La Comédie humaine [The Human Comedy]. Vol. I. Gallimard.Google Scholar
Bater, James H. 1984. “The Soviet City: Continuity and Change in Privilege and Place.” In The City in Cultural Context, ed. Agnew, John, Mercer, John, and Sopher, David. Allen and Unwin, 134–62.Google Scholar
Batiushkov, Konstantin. 1934. “Progulka po Moskve.” In Sochineniia. Academia, 297309.Google Scholar
Batiushkov, Konstantin. 1977. “Progulka v Akademiiu khudozhestv.” In Opyty v stikhakh i proze. Nauka, 7194.Google Scholar
Baudelaire, Charles. 1976. Oeuvres complètes [Complete Works]. Vol. II. Gallimard.Google Scholar
Belinskii, Vissarion. 1953–59. Polnoe sobranie sochinenii [Complete Collected Works]. 13 vols. Izdatel’stvo Akademii nauk SSSR.Google Scholar
Benjamin, Walter. 1986Paris, Capital of the Nineteenth Century.” In Reflections. Essays, Aphorisms, Autobiographical Writings, trans. Edmund Jephcott, ed. Demetz, Peter. Schocken Books, 146–62.Google Scholar
Benjamin, Walter. 2002. “Paris, Capital of the Nineteenth Century.” In The Arcades Project, trans. Eiland, Howard and McLaughlin, Kevin. The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 326.Google Scholar
Benjamin, Walter. 2003. “The Paris of the Second Empire in Baudelaire.” In Selected Writings, Vol. IV: 1938–1940, ed. Eiland, Howard and Michael, W. Jennings. The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 392.Google Scholar
Bogomolov, Igor’. 1963. Armeniia v tvorchestve Iakova Polonskogo [Armenia in the Work of Iakov Polonskii]. Izdatel’stvo AN Armianskoi SSR.Google Scholar
Bogomolov, Igor’ 1966. Polonskii v Gruzii [Polonskii in Georgia]. Literatura da khelovneba.Google Scholar
Bogomolov, Igor’ 1983. “Russkie pisateli v Gruzii v pervoi polovine XIX veka” [Russian Writers in Georgia in the First Half of the 19th Century]. In Russkie pisateli v Gruzii [Russian Writers in Georgia]. Merani, n.p.Google Scholar
Bogomolov, Igor’ 2002. Gruziia stala traditsiei dlia vsei russkoi poezii [Georgia Has Become a Tradition for All Russian Poetry]. Izdatel’stvo Tbilisskogo universiteta,Google Scholar
Bowman, Herbert. 1954. Vissarion Belinski 1811–1848: A Study in the Origins of Social Criticism in Russia. Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brower, Daniel R. 1990. The Russian City between Tradition and Modernity, 1850–1900. University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buckler, Julie. 2007. Mapping St. Petersburg: Imperial Text and Cityscape. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Bulgarin, F. V. 1841. “Peterburgskie tipy” [Petersburg Types]. Severnaia pchela [Northern Bee], No. 22: 8788.Google Scholar
Bulgarin, F. V. 2010a. Peterburgskie ocherki F.V. Bulgarina [The Petersburg Sketches of F. V. Bulgarin].Petropolis.Google Scholar
Bulgarin, F. V. 2010b. “Progulka po trotuaru Nevskogo prospekta.” In Peterburgskie ocherki F. V. Bulgarina [The Petersburg Sketches of F. V. Bulgarin]. Petropolis, 4381.Google Scholar
Burton, Richard D. E. 1994. The Flâneur and His City: Patterns of Daily Life in Paris 1815–1851. University of Durham.Google Scholar
Calhoun, Craig, ed. 1992. Habermas and the Public Sphere. MIT Press.Google Scholar
Casanova, Pascale. 1999. La République mondiale des lettres [The World Republic of Letters]. Éditions du Seuil.Google Scholar
Cheah, Pheng. 2014. “World Against Globe: Towards a Normative Conception of World Literature.” New Literary History, Vol. 45, No. 3 (Summer): 303–29.Google Scholar
Clark, T. J. 1984. The Painting of Modern Life: Paris in the Art of Manet and His Followers. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, Margaret. 1996. “Panoramic Literature and the Invention of Everyday Genres.” In Cinema and the Invention of Modern Life, ed. Charney, Leo and Schwartz, Vanessa R.. University of California Press, 227–52.Google Scholar
Curmer, L., ed. 1841–42. Les Français peints par eux-mêmes: Encyclopédie morale du XIX-e siècle [The French Painted by Themselves: A Moral Encyclopedia of the 19th Century]. 8 vols. L. Curmer.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David. 2003. What Is World Literature? Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
D’haen, Theo. 2012. “Mapping World Literature.” In The Routledge Companion to World Literature, ed. D’haen, Theo, Damrosch, David, and Kadir, Djelal. Routledge, 413–22.Google Scholar
Dostoevsky, Fedor. 1845. “Zuboskal” [The Banterer]. Otechestvennye zapiski [Notes of the Fatherland], No. 43: 4348.Google Scholar
Eisenstadt, Shmuel, Schluchter, Wolfgang, and Wittrock, Björn, eds. 2001. Public Spheres and Collective Identities. Transaction Publishers.Google Scholar
Ely, Christopher. 2002. This Meager Nature: Landscape and National Identity in Imperial Russia. Northern Illinois University Press.Google Scholar
Ferguson, Priscilla Parkhurst. 1994. “The Flâneur: The City and Its Discontents.” In Paris as Revolution: Writing the Nineteenth-Century City, University of California Press, 80114.Google Scholar
Fusso, Susanne. 1993. Designing Dead Souls: An Anatomy of Disorder in Gogol. Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Gilpin, William. 1792. Three Essays: On Picturesque Beauty, on Picturesque Travel; and on Sketching Landscape, to Which is Added a Poem, on Landscape Painting. Printed for R. Blamire.Google Scholar
Grigorovich, D. 1987. Literaturnye vospominaniia [Literary Reminiscences]. Khudozhestvennaia literature.Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen. 1991. The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society. Trans. Thomas Burger. The MIT Press.Google Scholar
Hale, Dorothy J., ed. 2006. The Novel: An Anthology of Criticism and Theory, 1900–2000. Blackwell.Google Scholar
Harootunian, Harry. 2000. History’s Disquiet: Modernity, Cultural Practice, and the Question of Everyday Life. Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Harootunian, Harry. 2005. “Some Thoughts on Comparability and the Space-Time Problem.” boundary 2, Vol. 32, No. 2 (Summer): 2452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harvey, David. 1985. “Paris, 1850–1870.” In Consciousness and the Urban Experience. Johns Hopkins University Press, 63220.Google Scholar
Hegel, G. W. F. 2001. Philosophy of Right. Trans. S. W. Dyde. Batoche Books Limited.Google Scholar
Hetzel, Pierre-Jules, ed. 1845–46. Le Diable à Paris. Paris et les Parisiens. Moeurs et coutumes, caractères et portraits des habitants de Paris, tableau complet de leur vie privée, publique, politique, artistique, littéraire, industrielle [The Devil in Paris. Paris and the Parisians. Ways and Customs, Characters and Portraits of the Residents of Paris, Complete Picture of Their Private, Public, Political, Artistic, Literary, and Industrial Life]. 2 vols. Typographie Lacrampe et Comp.Google Scholar
Holland, Kate. 2017. “Narrative Tradition on the Border: Alexander Veselovsky and Narrative Hybridity in the Age of World Literature.” Poetics Today, Vol. 38, No. 3 (Sept.): 429–52.Google Scholar
Hölscher, Lucian. 1978. “Öffentlichkeit” [Public Sphere]. In Geschichtiliche Grundbegriffe: Historisches Lexicon zur politisch-sozialen Sprache in Deutschland [Fundamental Concepts of History: A Historical Lexicon to the Political and Social Language in Germany], ed. Bruner, Otto, Conze, Werner and Koselleck, Reinhart. Vol. IV. Klett-Cotta, 413–67.Google Scholar
Hopkins, Terrence K., and Wallerstein, Immanuel, et al. eds. 1982. World-Systems Analysis. Theory and Methodology. Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Huart, Louis. 1841. Physiologie du flâneur [Physiology of the Flâneur]. Illust. Marie-Alexandre Alophe, Honoré Daumier, and Théodore Maurisset. Aubert-Lavigne.Google Scholar
Iakimovich, T. 1963. Frantsuzskii realisticheskii ocherk, 1830–1848gg. [The French Realist Sketch, 1830–1848]. Izdatel’stvo akademii nauk.Google Scholar
Jameson, Fredric. 1981. The Political Unconscious: Narrative as a Socially Symbolic Act. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Jameson, Fredric. 2002. A Singular Modernity. Essay on the Ontology of the Present. Verso.Google Scholar
Jersild, Austin. 2002. Orientalism and Empire: North Caucasus Mountain Peoples and the Georgian Frontier, 1845–1917. McGill-Queen’s University Press.Google Scholar
Jersild, Austin, and Melkadze, Nineli. 2002. “The Dilemmas of Enlightenment in the Eastern Borderlands: The Theater and Library in Tbilisi.” Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History, Vol. 3, No. 1 (Winter): 2749.Google Scholar
Keats, John. 1899. The Complete Poetical Works and Letters of John Keats. The Cambridge Edition. Houghton, Mifflin and Company.Google Scholar
Kliger, Ilya. 2017. “Historical Poetics between Russia and the West: Towards a Nonlinear Model of Literary History and Social Ontology.” Poetics Today, Vol. 38, No. 3 (Sept.): 453–84.Google Scholar
Kliger, Ilya. 2018. “Scenarios of Power in Turgenev’s First Love: Russian Realism and the Allegory of the State.” Comparative Literature, Vol. 70, No. 1: 2545.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kliger, Ilya, and Maslov, Boris, guest eds. 2017 . “Special Section: Historical Poetics in Theory.Poetics Today, Vol. 38, No. 3 (Sept.): 417548.Google Scholar
Komarovich, V. L. 1924. “Idei frantsuzskix sotsial’nykh utopii v mirovozzrenii Belinskogo” [The Ideas of French Social Utopias in Belinskii’s Worldview]. In Venok Belinskomu [A Wreath for Belinskii], ed. Piksanov, N. K.. Novaia Moskva, 243–72.Google Scholar
Konechnyi, Al’bin. 2010. “Bulgarin bytopisatel’ i Peterburg v ego ocherkakh.” In Peterburgskie ocherki F.V. Bulgarina. Petropolis, 542.Google Scholar
Kuleshov, V. I. 1958.Otechestvennye zapiski” i literatura 40-kh godov XIX veka [“Notes of the Fatherland” and the Literature of the 1840s]. Izdatel’stvo Moskovskogo universiteta.Google Scholar
Kuleshov, V. I. ed. 1991. Fiziologiia Peterburga [Physiology of Petersburg]. Nauka.Google Scholar
Lacroix, Auguste de. 1841–42. “Le flâneur.” In Les Français peints par eux-mêmes: Encyclopédie morale du XIX-e siècle. 9 vols. L. Curmer, Vol. III, 6572.Google Scholar
Larousse, Pierre, ed. 1874. Grand dictionnaire universel du XIX siècle [Great Universal Dictionary of the 19th Century]. Vol. 12 . Administration du grand dictionnaire universel.Google Scholar
Lauster, Martina. 2007a. Sketches of the Nineteenth Century: European Journalism and its Physiologies, 1830–1850. Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Lauster, Martina. 2007b. “Walter Benjamin’s Myth of the Flâneur.” Modern Language Review, Vol. 102, No. 1 (January): 139–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavater, Johann Kaspar. 1775–78. Physiognomische Fragmente zur Beförderung der Menschenkenntnis und Menschenliebe [Physiognomic Fragments for the Advancement of Human Understanding and Human Love]. 4 vols. Heinrich Steiner und Companie.Google Scholar
Lefebvre, Henri. 1986. La Production de l’éspace [The Production of Space]. 3rd ed. Éditions Anthropos.Google Scholar
Le Men, Ségolène. 1993. “Peints par eux-mêmes … ” [Painted by Themselves …]. In Les Français peints par eux-mêmes: Panorama social du XIXe siècle [The French, Painted by Themselves: A Social Panorama of the 19th Century], ed. Le Men, Ségolène and Abélès, Luce. Éditions de la Réunion des musées nationaux, 446.Google Scholar
Lukács, György (Georg). 1964. “The International Significance of Russian Democratic Literary Criticism.” In Studies in European Realism, Grosset and Dunlap, 97126.Google Scholar
Lukács, György 1977. The Theory of the Novel: A Historico-Philosophical Essay on the Forms of the Great Epic Literature. Trans. Anna Bostock. 3rd ed. MIT Press.Google Scholar
Makharadze, N. A. 1984. Russkaia gazeta na Kavkaze v 40–50-e gody XIX veka (Zakavkazskii vestnik i Kavkaz v 1845–1856 gg.) [The Russian Newspaper in the Caucasus in the 1840s and 50s: The Transcaucasian Herald and Caucasus, 1845–1856]. Izdatel’stvo Tbilisskogo universiteta.Google Scholar
Malia, Martin. 1961. Alexander Herzen and the Birth of Russian Socialism, 1812–1855. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Malinova, Ol’ga Iu. 2012. “Obshchestvo, publika, obshchestvennost’ v Rossii serediny XIX – nachala XX veka: Otrazhenie v poniiatiiakh praktik publichnoj kommunikatsii i obshchestvennoi samodeiatel’nosti” [Society, Public, Sociality in Mid-19th – Early 20th-Century Russia: Their Reflection in Terms of Practices of Public Communication and Independent Social Activity]. In Poniatiia o Rossii: K istoricheskoi semantike imperskogo perioda [Understandings of Russia: Toward a Historical Semantics of the Imperial Period]. Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie, 428–63.Google Scholar
Marullo, Thomas Gaiton. 2009. “Editor’s Introduction.” In Petersburg: The Physiology of a City, ed. Nekrasov, Nikolai, trans. Thomas Gaiton Marullo, Northwestern University Press, xixxci.Google Scholar
McKeon, Michael. 2000. Theory of the Novel: A Historical Approach. Johns Hopkins University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meilakh, B. S. 1973. “Teoreticheskoe obosnovanie zhanra povesti natural’noi shkoly” [The Theoretical Foundation of the Natural School’s Narrative Genre]. Russkaia povest’ XIX veka [Russian Narrative of the 19th Century]. Nauka, 247–58.Google Scholar
Moretti, Franco. 2000. New Left Review, No. 1 (Jan./Feb.): 5468.Google Scholar
Moretti, Franco. 2003. “More Conjectures.” New Left Review, No. 20 (March/April): 7381.Google Scholar
Moretti, Franco. 2011. “World-Systems Analysis, Evolutionary Theory, Weltliteratur.” In Immanuel Wallerstein and the Problem of the World: System, Scale, Culture, ed. Palumbo-Liu, David, Robbins, Bruce, and Tanoukhi, Nirvana. Duke University Press, 67–77.Google Scholar
Morozova, S. N. 2010. “Kavkazskie motivy v tvorchestve Ia. Polonskogo. Sbornik ‘Sazandar’” [Caucasian Motifs in the Work of Ia. Polonskii: The Collection Sazandar]. Izvestiia Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo pedagogicheskogo universiteta [Proceedings of Volgograd State Pedagogical University], Vol. 46, No. 2: 139–41.Google Scholar
Nechaeva, V. S. 1967. V. G. Belinskii. Zhizn’ i tvorchestvo, 1842–1848 [V. G. Belinskii: Life and Work, 1842–1848]. Nauka, 102–37.Google Scholar
Nekrasov, Nikolai. 1843. “Ocherki russkikh nravov, ili litsevaia storona i iznanka roda chelovecheskogo. Sochinenia Faddeia Bulgarina” [Sketches of Russian Morals, or the Outer and Inner Sides of the Human Race. Works of Faddei Bulgarin.] Otechestvennye zapiski [Notes of the Fatherland], No. 5, section VI, 2529.Google Scholar
Nekrasov, Nikolai. 1967. “Fiziologiia Peterburga. Chast’ pervaia” (1845). In Sobranie sochinenii v vos’mi tomakh. Vol. VII. Khudozhestvennaia literatura, 9697.Google Scholar
Oldenburg, Veena Talwar. 1984. The Making of Colonial Lucknow, 1856–1877. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Orlov, P. 1961. Ia. P. Polonskii. Riazanskoe knizhnoe izdatel’stvo.Google Scholar
Orsini, Francesca. 2015. “The Multilingual Local in World Literature.” Comparative Literature, Vol. 67, No. 4: 345–74.Google Scholar
Paris, ou le livre des Cent-et-un [Paris, or the Book of the One Hundred and One]. 1831–34. 15 vols. Ladvocat.Google Scholar
Parry, Benita. 2009. “Aspects of Peripheral Modernisms.” Ariel: A Historical Review of English International Literature, Vol. 40, No. 1: 2755.Google Scholar
Physiologie des physiologies [Physiology of Physiologies]. 1841. Desloges Éditeur.Google Scholar
Polonskii, Iakov. 1846a “Kratkii ocherk nekotorykh gorodov Kavkaza i Zakavkazskogo kraia” [Brief Survey of Some Cities of the Caucusus and the Transcaucasian Region]. In Kavkazskii kalendar’ na 1847 g. [Caucasian Almanac for the Year 1847]. Tipografiia Kantseliarii Namestnika Kavkazskogo, 53113.Google Scholar
Polonskii, Iakov. 1846b. “Statisticheskii ocherk Tiflisa” [Statistical Survey of Tiflis]. In Kavkazskii kalendar’ na 1847 g., 147–73.Google Scholar
Polonskii, Iakov. 1847. “Pis’mo v Moskvu” [A letter to Moscow]. Zakavkazskii vestnik [Transcaucasian Herald], No. 6 (February 27): 4748.Google Scholar
Polonskii, Iakov. 1849. Sazandar. Tiflis.Google Scholar
Polonskii, Iakov. 1850. “Tiflis na litso i naiznanku” [Tiflis Outside and In]. Zakavkazskii vestnik [Transcaucasian Herald], Nos. 7, 8, 10, 11, 15.Google Scholar
Polonskii, Iakov. 1851. “Saiat Nova.” Kavkaz [Caucasus], Nos. 1–2 (January).Google Scholar
Polonskii, Iakov. 1933a. Ia. P. Polonskii, Stikhotvoreniia i poèmy [Ia. P. Polonskii, Lyrics and Long Poems]. Ed. and intro. Eikhenbaum, B. M.. Sovetskii pisatel’.Google Scholar
Polonskii, Iakov. 1933b.“A Stroll through Tiflis” [Progulka po Tiflisu]. In Stikhotvoreniia i poèmy, ed. Eikhenbaum, B. M.. Sovetskii pisatel’.Google Scholar
Polonskii, Iakov. 1988. Ia. P. Polonskii. Proza [Prose.] Sovetskaia Rossiia.Google Scholar
Preiss(-Basset), Nathalie. 1999. Les Physiologies en France au XIXe siècle: étude historique, littéraire et stylistique [Physiologies in France in the 19th Century: A Historical, Literary, and Stylistic Study]. Éditions Inter-Universitaires.Google Scholar
Punter, David. 1994. “The Picturesque and the Sublime: Two Worldscapes.” In The Politics of the Picturesque: Literature, landscape, and aesthetics since 1770, ed. Copley, Stephen and Garside, Peter. Cambridge University Press, 220–39.Google Scholar
Ram, Harsha. 2016. “The Scale of Global Modernisms: Imperial, National, Regional, Local.” PMLA, Vol. 131, No. 5 (October): 1372–85.Google Scholar
Reeve, Helen. 1959. “Utopian Socialism in Russian Literature, 1840–1860s.” American Slavic and East European Review, No. 18: 374–93.Google Scholar
Rhinelander, L. H. 1996.“Viceroy Vorontsov’sAdministration of the Caucasus.” In Transcaucasia, Nationalism and Social Change: Essays in the History of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia, ed. Suny, Ronald Grigor. University of Michigan Press, 87104.Google Scholar
Romanenko, Svetlana M. 2006. “Kavkazskii mif v russkom romantizme i ego evoliutsiia v tvorchestve Ia. P. Polonskogo” [The Caucasian Myth in Russian Romanticism and its Evolution in the Work of Ia. P. Polonskii]. Ph.D. dissertation in Philological Sciences, Tomsk State University.Google Scholar
Sieburth, Richard. 1985. “Une idéologie du lisible: le phénomène des Physiologies” [An Ideology of the Legible: The Phenomenon of the Physiologies]. Romantisme, No. 47: 3960.Google Scholar
Terras, Victor. 1974. Belinskij and Russian Literary Criticism: The Heritage of Organic Aesthetics. University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Tester, Keith, ed. 1994. The Flâneur. Routledge.Google Scholar
Texier, Edmond. 1851. Histoire des Journaux: Biographie des journalistes contenant l’histoire politique, littéraire, industrielle, pittoresque et anecdotique de chaque journal publié à Paris et la biographie de ses rédacteurs [History of Journals: Biography of Journalists, Containing the Political, Literary, Industrial, Picturesque and Anecdotal Story of Each Journal Published in Paris and the Biography of its Editors]. Pagnerre.Google Scholar
Tseitlin, A. G. 1965. Stanovlenie russkogo realizma (Russkii fiziologicheskii ocherk) [The Making of Russian Realism: The Russian Physiological Sketch]. Nauka.Google Scholar
Тurgenev, Ivan. 1852. Zapiski okhotnika [A Hunter’s Notebook]. Peter Lang.Google Scholar
van Biesbrock, Hans-Rüdiger. 1978. Die literarische Mode der Physiologien in Frankreich (1840–1842) [The Literary Mode of the Physiologies in France, 1840–1842]. Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, Immanuel. 1979. The Capitalist World Economy. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Weber, Harry B. 1971. “Belinskij and the Aesthetics of Utopian Socialism.” SEEJ, No. 15: 293304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
WreC (Warwick Research Collective). 2015. Combined and Uneven Development. Towards a New Theory of World-Literature. Liverpool University Press.Google Scholar
Z.Z. 1843. “Russkaia literatura” [Russian Literature].Severnaia pchela [Northern Bee], No. 81: 322–23.Google Scholar

References

Abdel-Malek, Anour. 1963. “Orientalism in Crisis,” Diogenes (Dec.) https://doi.org/10.1177/039219216301104407.Google Scholar
Ahmad, Muhammad. 2008. “The Notions of Dar Al-Harb and Dar Al-Islam in Islamic Jurisprudence with Special Reference to the Hanafi School.” Islamic Studies, Vol. 47, No. 1: 5-37. SSRN, https://ssrn.com/abstract=2238446.Google Scholar
al-Ḥillī, Ṣafī al-Dīn. [1982] 1992. Sharḥ al-kāfiyya al-badī‘iyyah fī ‘ulūm al-balāghah [The Explication of the Sufficient Badī‘iyyah Ode in Rhetorical Sciences and Adornments in Innovativeness]. Ed. Nasīb Nashāwī. Dār Ṣādir.Google Scholar
Anderson, Benedict. 1991. Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. 2nd ed. Verso.Google Scholar
Antrim, Zayde. 2012. Routes and Realms, the Power of Place in the Early Islamic World. Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, Morag, Butlin, Robin, and Heffernan, Michael. 1995. Geography and Imperialism, 1820–1920. Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Bencheneb, Mohamed. 1936. Ibn al-Wardī”, The Encyclopedia of Islām. Vol. III. E. J. Brill ltd.Google Scholar
Blunt, A., and Wills, J., eds. 2000. Dissident Geographies: An introduction to Radical Ideas and Practice. Pearson Education Limited.Google Scholar
Bonebakker, S. A. 1990. “Adab and the Concept of Belles-Lettres.” In Belles-Lettres, ‘Abbāsid (The Cambridge History of Arabic Literature), ed. Ashtiany, Julia et al. Cambridge University Press, 1630.Google Scholar
Brosseau, M. 1995. “The City in Textual Form: Manhattan Transfer’s New York.Acumene, Vol. 2: 89114.Google Scholar
Fludernik, Monika . 2003. “Metanarrative and Metafictional Commentary: From Metadiscursivity to Metanarration and Metafiction.Poetica, Vol. 35, Nos. 1–2: 139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foucault, Michel. 1971. The Archaeology of Knowledge and the Discourse on Language. Pantheon Books.Google Scholar
al-Ḥamawī, Yāqūt ibn-ᶜAbdullah al-Rūmī. N.d. Muʻjam al-buldān. Dār Ṣādir.Google Scholar
Heinrichs, W. 1995. “The Classification of the Sciences and the Consolidation of Philology in Classical Islam.” In Centres of Learning: Learning and Location in Pre-Modern Europe and the Near East, ed. Drijvers, J. W. and MacDonald, A. A.. Brill, 119–20.Google Scholar
Ibn al-Athīr, Ḍiyāʾal-Dīn. N.d. Al-Washy al-marqūm. Ed. Saʻīd, Jamīl. BaghdadGoogle Scholar
Al-Jāḥiẓ, ʻAmro, Baḥr, ibn. 2012. The Book of Insight Into Commerce (Kitab al-Tabassur bi al-Tijarah). Trans. Adi Setia. IBFIM.Google Scholar
Wadie, Jwaideh. ed. [1959] 1987. The Introductory Chapters of Yāqūt’s Muʻjam Al-Buldān. E. J. Brill.Google Scholar
Krachkovski, KratIgnati Iulianovich. 1963–65. Istoria Arabskoi Geograficheskoi Literatury. Dār al-Gharb al-Islāmī; in Arabic: Tārikh Al-Adab al-jughrāfi al-Arabī.Trans. Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn ᶜUthmān Hāshim, 1987.Google Scholar
Lefebvre, Henri. 1984. The Production of Space. Trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith. Blackwell.Google Scholar
Levi, Scott C., and Sela, Ron, eds. 2009. Islamic Central Asia: An Anthology of Historical Sources. Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Livingstone, David N. 1992. The Geographical Tradition: Episodes in the History of a Contested Enterprise. Blackwell.Google Scholar
Makdisi, George. 1990. The Rise of Humanism. Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Muhanna, Elias. 2018. The World in a Book. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Al-Muqaddasī, , N.d. “Aḥsan al-taqāsīm fī maʿrifat al-aqālīm by al-Muqaddasī.” https://brill.com/view/title/24570.Google Scholar
al-Musawi, Muhsin. 1981. Scheherazade in England. Three Continents.Google Scholar
al-Musawi, Muhsin. 2015. The Medieval Islamic Republic of Letters: Arabic Knowledge Construction.University of Notre Dame Press.Google Scholar
al-Musawi, Muhsin. 2018. “Postcolonial Theory in Modern Arab Culture,” Interventions, International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, Vol. 20, No. 2: 174–91. www.tandfonline.com/eprint/5pgNA74NQNjkJBkZgPWF.Google Scholar
al-Nuwayrī, Aḥmad. 2016. “Preface.” In The Ultimate Ambition in the Arts of Erudition, ed. and trans. Muhanna, Elias. Penguin Random House.Google Scholar
Prince, Gerald. 2003. Dictionary of Narratology. Rev. ed. University of Nebraska Press.Google Scholar
Said, Edward. 1977. “Imaginative Geography and its Representations: Orientalizing the Orient,” The Georgia Review, Vol. 31, No. 1 (Spring): 162206.Google Scholar
Said, Edward. 1978. Orientalism. Routledge & Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Sanudo Torsello, Marino. 2011. The Book of the Secrets of the Faithful of the Cross (Liber Secretorum Fidelium Crucis). Trans. Peter Lock. Ashgate.Google Scholar
Sarton, George. 1947–48. Introduction to the History of Science. Vol. I. Carnegie Institute of Washington/ Williams and Wilkins.Google Scholar
Sayyid, Ayman Fuad. 2011. “The Unpublished Works of Arabic Geography: An Overview and a Classification,” from “The Earth and its Sciences in Islamic Manuscripts.” In Proceedings of the Fifth Conference of al-Furqan Islamic Heritage Foundation, 175219. www.muslimheritage.com/article/unpublished-works-of-arabic-geography.Google Scholar
Schwab, Raymond. 1984. Oriental Renaissance: Europe’s Rediscovery of India and the East, 1680–1880. Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Sezgin, Fuat. 1987. The Contribution of Arab and Muslim Geographers in the Creation of the World Map. Institut für Geschichte der Arabisch-Islamischen Wissenschaften an der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität.Google Scholar
Sharp, J. 2000. “Toward a Critical Analysis of Fictive Geographies.” Area, Vol. 32: 327–34.Google Scholar
Tavares, David, and Le Bel, Pierre-Mathieu. 2008. “Forcing the Boundaries of Genre: The Imaginative Geography of South America in Luis Sepulveda’s ‘Patagonia Express’.” Area, Vol. 40, No. 1 (March): 4554.Google Scholar
Toomer, G. J. 1996. Eastern Wisedome and Learning: The Study of Arabic in Seventeenth-Century England. Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Al-Waṭwāṭ, Jamāl al-Dīn Muḥammad al-Kutubī. 2000. Mabāhij al-Fikar wa Manāhij al-ᶜIbar. Dār al-ᶜArabiyah lil-Mawsūʻāt.Google Scholar
Zadeh, Traves. 2017. Mapping Frontiers across Medieval Islam: Geography, Translation, and the ‘Abbasid Empire. I. B. Tauris.Google Scholar

References

Abrams, M. H., and Greenblatt, Stephen, eds. 2003. Norton Anthology of English Literature. 7th ed. W. W. Norton & Co.Google Scholar
Agamben, Georgio. 1999. Potentialities: Collected Essays in Philosophy. Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Apter, Emily. 2013. Against World Literature: On the Politics of Untranslatability. Verso.Google Scholar
Arrival. 2016. Directed by Denis Villeneuve. 21 Laps Entertainment.Google Scholar
Benedict, Barbara M. 2003. “The Paradox of the Anthology: Collecting and Différance in Eighteenth-Century Britain.” New Literary History, Vol. 35, No. 2 (Spring): 231–56.Google Scholar
Borges, Jorge Luis. 1998. The Aleph. Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Chaney, Christine. 2001. “Editor’s Introduction.” Pedagogy, Vol. 1, No. 1: 191–94.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David. 2001. “The Mirror and the Window: Reflections on Anthology Construction.” Pedagogy, Vol. 1, No. 1: 207–13.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David. 2003. What Is World Literature? Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David. 2009a. How to Read World Literature. Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David. ed. 2009b. Teaching World Literature. Modern Language Association.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David. 2014. “Review of Against World Literature: On the Politics of Untranslatability by Emily Apter.” Comparative Literature Studies, Vol. 51, No. 3: 504–8.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David, and Pike, David L., eds. 2009. The Longman Anthology of World Literature. 2nd ed. 6 vols. Pearson Longman.Google Scholar
Doherty, Brian. 2014. “The Center Cannot Hold: The Development of World Literature Anthologies.” Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics, Vol. 34: 100–24.Google Scholar
Donoghue, Denis. 1988. We Irish: Essays on Irish Literature and Society. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Finneran, Richard J., ed. 1983. The Poems of W. B. Yeats: A New Edition. Macmillan.Google Scholar
Gregson, Davis. 2011. “Introduction.” In Virgil’s Eclogues, ed. Krisak, Len, University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Guillory, John. 1993. Cultural Capital: The Problem of Literary Canon Formation. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Harris, Wendell V. 1991. “Canonicity.” PMLA, Vol. 106, No. 1: 110–21.Google Scholar
Heise, Ursula. 2008. Sense of Place and Sense of Planet: The Environmental Imagination of the Global. Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Kadir, Djelal. 2010. Memos from the Beseiged City. Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Kelleher, Margaret. 2011. “The Anthology and the Duanaire.” In The Oxford History of the Irish Book. Vol. IV. Oxford University Press, 448–60.Google Scholar
Kermode, Frank. 1979. “Institutional Control of Interpretation.” Salmagundi, Vol. 43: 7286.Google Scholar
Kermode, Frank. 1973. Oxford Anthology of English Literature. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kipling, Rudyard. 1987. Kim. Ed. Sandison, Alan. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kopper, John. 2010. “Review.” Comparative Literature Studies, Vol. 47, No. 3: 399408.Google Scholar
Lawall, Sarah. 2010. “Introduction: Reading World Literature.” In Reading World Literature: Theory, History, Practice, ed. Lawall, Sarah. University of Texas Press, 164.Google Scholar
McKinsey, Martin. 2002. “Classicism and Colonial Retrenchment in W. B. Yeats’s ‘No Second Troy.’” Twentieth Century Literature, Vol. 48, No. 2 (Summer): 174–90.Google Scholar
Paulson, William. 2001. Literary Culture in a World Transformed: A Future for the Humanities. Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Pevear, Richard, and Volokhonsky, Larissa, trans. 2007. War and Peace. By Leo Tolstoy. Knopf.Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, Rudolph. 1968. History of Classical Scholarship from the Beginnings to the End of the Hellenistic Age. Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Pizer, John. 2006. The Idea of World Literature: History and Pedagogical Practice. Louisiana State University Press.Google Scholar
Price, Leah. 2003. The Anthology and the Rise of the Novel: From Richardson to George Eliot Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ronsard, Pierre. 2010. Sonnets pour Hélène. Kessinger Publishing.Google Scholar
Said, Edward. 1994. Culture and Imperialism. Vintage Books.Google Scholar
Saussy, Haun, ed. 2006. Comparative Literature in the Age of Globalization. Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Showalter, Elaine. 2002. Teaching Literature. Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Smith, Karen R. 2011. “What Good Is World Literature? World Literature Pedagogy and the Rhetoric of Moral Crisis.” College English, Vol. 73, No. 6: 585603.Google Scholar
Tolkien, J. R. R. 2005. The Lord of the Rings. HarperCollins.Google Scholar
Thomsen, Mads Rosendahl. 2008. Mapping World Literature. Bloomsbury.Google Scholar
Vendler, Helen. 2008. Our Secret Discipline: Yeats and Lyric Form. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Yeats, W. B. [1889] 1892. The Wanderings of Oisin. T. F. Unwin.Google Scholar
Yeats, W. B. 1912. The Green Helmet and Other Poems. Macmillan and Co. Ltd.Google Scholar
Yeats, W. B. 1962. Explorations. Macmillan.Google Scholar
Zeitchik, Steven. 2016. “Decoding the Linguistic Geekiness behind Arrival’s Sci-fi Sheen.” Los Angeles Times, Nov. 25. www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-et-mn-arrival-movie-linguist-20161125-story.html.Google Scholar

References

Allington, Daniel, Brouillette, Sarah, and Golumbia, David. 2016. “Neoliberal Tools (and Archives): A Political History of Digital Humanities.” LA Review of Books, May 1. https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/neoliberal-tools-archives-political-history-digital-humanities/#!Google Scholar
Ballantyne, Tony. 2003. “Rereading the Archive and Opening up the Nation-State: Colonial Knowledge in South Asia (and Beyond).” In After the Imperial Turn: Thinking With and Through the Nation, ed. Burton, Antoinette. Durham University Press, 102–21.Google Scholar
Bammam, David, Underwood, Ted, and Smith, Noah A.. 2014. “A Bayesian Mixed Effects Model of Literary Character.” In Proceedings of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Baltimore, Maryland, USA, June 23–25, 2014). Association for Computational Linguistics, 370–79. http://acl2014.org/acl2014/P14-1/pdf/P14-1035.pdf.Google Scholar
Bergenmar, Jenny, and Leppanen, Katarina. 2017. “Gender and Vernaculars in Digital Humanities and World Literature.” NORA – Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research, Vol. 25, No. 4: 232–46.Google Scholar
Bianco, Jamie “Skye.” 2015. “This Digital Humanities Which Is Not One.” In Debates in the Digital Humanities, ed. Gold, Matthew K.. University of Minnesota Press, 98112. Minnesota Scholarship Online, doi: 10.5749/minnesota/9780816677948.003.0012.Google Scholar
Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes. N.d. www.cervantesvirtual.com/.Google Scholar
Bode, Katherine. 2012. Reading by Numbers: Recalibrating the Literary Field. Anthem Press.Google Scholar
Bode, Katherine. 2017a. “The Equivalence of ‘Close’ and ‘Distant’ Reading; Or, Toward a New Object for Data-Rich Literary History.” Modern Language Quarterly, Vol. 78, No. 1: 77106. doi: 10.1215/00267929-3699787.Google Scholar
Bode, Katherine. 2017b. “Fictional Systems: Mass-Digitisation, Network Analysis, and Nineteenth-Century Australian Newspapers.” Victorian Periodicals Review, Vol. 50, No. 1: 100–38. doi: 10/1353/vpr.2017.0005.Google Scholar
Bode, Katherine. 2018. A World of Fiction: Digital Collections and the Future of Literary History. University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Bode, Katherine, and Hetherington, Carol, eds. N.d. To Be Continued: The Australian Newspaper Fiction Database. http://cdhrdatasys.anu.edu.au/tobecontinued/.Google Scholar
Lab, Bodmer. N.d. A Digital World Literature. University of Genève and Martin Bodmer Foundatin. http://bodmerlab.unige.ch/en/.Google Scholar
British Library and findmypast. N.d. British Newspaper Archive. www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/Google Scholar
Brown, Susan, Clements, Patricia, and Grundy, Isobel, directors. N.d. The Orlando Project: Feminist Literary History and Digital Humanities. www.artsrn.ualberta.ca/orlando/.Google Scholar
Burrows, John F. 1987. Computation into Criticism: A Study of Jane Austen’s Novels and an Experiment in Method. Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Cordell, Ryan. 2017. “‘Q i-tjb the Raven’: Taking Dirty OCR Seriously.” Book History, Vol. 20: 188225, doi: 10.1353/bh.2017.0006.Google Scholar
Cordell, Ryan, and Smith, David, eds. 2017. Viral Texts: Mapping Networks of Reprinting in 19th-Century Newspapers and Magazines, http://viraltexts.org/.Google Scholar
Crane, Gregory R., editor in chief. N.d. Perseus Digital Library. www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David. 2003. What Is World Literature? Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David. 2004. “World Literature in a Postcanonical, Hypercanonical Age.” In Comparative Literature in an Age of Globalization, ed. Saussy., Haun Johns Hopkins University Press, 4353.Google Scholar
Damrosch, David. 2013. “World Literature in a Postliterary Age.” Modern Language Quarterly, Vol. 7, No. 2: 151–70. doi: 10.1215/00267929-2072971.Google Scholar
Dimock, Wai Chee. 2006. Through Other Continents: American Literature across Deep Time. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Eaves, Morris, Essick, Robert, and Viscomi, Joseph, eds. 2020. William Blake Archive. www.blakearchive.org/.Google Scholar
Erlin, Matt, and Tatlock, Lynne, eds. 2014. Distant Readings: Topologies of German Culture in the Long Nineteenth Century. NED – New ed. Boydell and Brewer. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/10.7722/j.ctt5vj848.Google Scholar
Europeana. N.d. Europeana Collections. .www.europeana.eu/.Google Scholar
Folsom, Ed., and Price, Kenneth M., eds. N.d.The Walt Whitman Archive. http://whitmanarchive.org/.Google Scholar
Fyfe, Paul. 2016. “An Archaeology of Victorian Newspapers.” Victorian Periodicals Review, Vol. 49, No. 4: 546–77, doi: 10.1353/vpr.2016.0039.Google Scholar
Goodwin, Jonathan, and Holbo, John, eds. 2011. Reading Graphs, Maps, Trees: Critical Responses to Franco Moretti. Parlor Press.Google Scholar
Greene, Roland. 2004. “Not Works But Networks: Colonial Worlds in Comparative Literature.” In Comparative Literature in an Age of Globalization, ed. Saussy, Haun. Johns Hopkins University Press, 212–23.Google Scholar
Google Books. Google Books. www.books.google.com/Google Scholar
HathiTrust. N.d. HathiTrust Digital Library. www.hathitrust.org/Google Scholar
He, Chengzhou. 2017. “World Literature as Event: Isben and Modern Chinese Fiction.” Comparative Literature Studies, Vol. 54, No. 1: 141–60. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/10.5325.complitstudies.54.1.0141.Google Scholar
Hirsch, Brett, and Craig, Hugh, eds. 2014. Digital Shakespeares: Innovations, Interventions, Mediations. Special issue of The Shakespearean International Yearbook 14. Ashgate.Google Scholar
Jeanneney, Jean-Noël. 2006. Google and the Myth of Universal Knowledge: A View from Europe. University of Chicago Press. .Google Scholar
Jockers, Matthew L. 2013. Macroanalysis: Digital Methods and Literary History. University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Kim, David, Shepard, David, and Wan, Jun, with contributions by Leynov, David and Li, Elaine, and past contributions by Ardeni, Viola, Arevalo, Lourdes, de Carlo, Nickolas, Chykerda, C. Myles, Kurtz, Wendy, Williams, Amber, and Xie, Harry. N.d. WorldLiterature@UCLA: Translation Network Analysis in the Digital Humanities. University of California, Los Angeles, https://worldlit.cdh.ucla.edu/.Google Scholar
Kirsch, Adam. 2014. “Technology is Taking over English Departments: The False Promise of the Digital Humanities.” New Republic, May 3. https://newrepublic.com/article/117428/limits-digital-humanities-adam-kirsch.Google Scholar
Leffler, Yvonne, Arping, Åsa, Bergenmar, Jenny, Hermansson, Gunilla, and Johansson, Birgitta. N.d. Swedish Women Writers on Export in the 19th Century. https://swedishwomenwriters.wordpress.com/Google Scholar
Library of Congress. N.d. Chronicling America. https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/.Google Scholar
Library of Congress. N.d. World Digital Library. www.loc.gov/wdl/.Google Scholar
Liu, Alan. 2004. The Laws of Cool: Knowledge Work and the Culture of Information. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Liu, Alan. 2008. Local Transcendence: Essays on Postmodern Historicism and the Database. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Liu, Alan. 2017a. “Assessing Data Workflows for Common Data ‘Moves’ Across Disciplines.” Alan Liu blog, May 6. doi: 10.21972/G21593.Google Scholar
Liu, Alan. 2017b. “Toward Critical Infrastructure Studies: Digital Humanities, New Media Studies, and the Culture of Infrastructure.” Alan Liu blog, Feb. 23, 2017, http://liu.english.ucsb.edu/toward-critical-infrastructure-studies-u-connecticut/.Google Scholar
Long, Hoyt, and So, Richard Jean. 2016. “Turbulent Flow: A Computational Model of World Literature.” Modern Language Quarterly, Vol. 77, No. 3: 345–67. doi: 10.1215/00267929-3570656.Google Scholar
Mak, Bonnie. 2014. “Archaeology of a Digitization.” Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, Vol. 65, No. 8: 1515–26. doi: 10.1002/asi.23061.Google Scholar
Marche, Stephen. 2012. “Literature is Not Data: Against Digital Humanities.” LA Review of Books, Oct. 28. https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/literature-is-not-data-against-digital-humanities/#!Google Scholar
McGann, Jerome, ed. 2008. The Complete Writings and Pictures of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. www.rossettiarchive.org/about/index.html.Google Scholar
McGann, Jerome, 2014. A New Republic of Letters: Memory and Scholarship in the Age of Digital Reproduction. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Ministry of Human Resource Development. N.d. Digital Library of India. https://ndl.iitkgp.ac.in/.Google Scholar
Montrose, Louis. 1992. “New Historicisms.” In Redrawing the Boundaries: The Transformation of English and American Literary Studies, ed. Greenblatt, Stephen and Gunn, Giles. Modern Language Association, 392417.Google Scholar
Moretti, Franco. 2000. “Conjectures on World Literature.” New Left Review, Vol. 1: 54–68. https://newleftreview.org/II/1/franco-moretti-conjectures-on-world-literature.Google Scholar
Moretti, Franco. 2005. Graphs, Maps, Trees: Abstract Models for Literary History. Verso.Google Scholar
Moretti, Franco. 2013. Distant Reading. Verso.Google Scholar
Moretti, Franco. 2017. “Patterns and Interpretation.” Stanford Literary Lab Pamphlet, Vol. 15 (Sept.). https://litlab.stanford.edu/LiteraryLabPamphlet15.pdf.Google Scholar
Morris, Leslie A., general ed. 2012. Emily Dickinson Archive. www.edickinson.org/team.Google Scholar
Mowat, Barbara, Werstine, Paul, Poston, Michael, and Niles, Rebecca, eds. N.d. Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare’s Plays from Folger Digital Texts. Folger Shakespeare Library. www.folgerdigitaltexts.org.Google Scholar
National Library of Australia. N.d. Trove. https://trove.nla.gov.au/.Google Scholar
Oceanic Exchanges Project Team. 2017. Oceanic Exchanges: Tracing Global Information Networks in Historical Newspaper Repositories, 1840–1914. doi: 10.17605/OSF.IO/WA94S.Google Scholar
Ortega, Élika. 2018. “Archives, Libraries, Collections, and Databases: A First Look at Digital Literary Studies in Mexico.” Hispanic Review, Vol. 86, No. 2: 229–47. Project MUSE, doi: 10.1353/hir.2018.0016.Google Scholar
Partzsch, Henrietta, Lappalainen, Päivi, PoniŽ, Katja Mihurko, Nedregotten Sørbø, Marie, and van Dijk, Suzan. N.d. Travelling Texts 1790–1914: The Transnational Reception of Women’s Writing at the Fringes of Europe, http://travellingtexts.huygens.knaw.nl/.Google Scholar
Piper, Andrew. 2015. “Novel Devotions: Conversional Reading, Computational Modeling, and the Modern Novel.” New Literary History, Vol. 46, No. 1: 6398. Project MUSE, doi: 10.1353/nlh.2015.0008.Google Scholar
Piper, Andrew. 2018. Enumerations. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Plaisant, Catherine, Rose, James, Bei, Yu, Loretta Auvil, Matthew G. Kirshenbaum, Martha Smith, Nell, Clement, Tanya, and Lord, Greg. 2006. “Exploring Erotics in Emily Dickinson’s Correspondence with Text Mining and Visual Interfaces.” In Proceedings of the 6th ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries, Association for Computing Machinery, 141–51. www.cs.umd.edu/hcil/trs/2006–01/2006–01.pdf.Google Scholar
Putnam, Lara. 2016. “The Transnational and the Text-Searchable: Digitized Sources and the Shadows They Cast.” American Historical Review, Vol. 121, No. 2 (1 April): 377402. doi: 10.1093/ahr/121.2.377.Google Scholar
Risam, Roopika. 2015. “Beyond the Margins: Intersectionality and the Digital Humanities.” Digital Humanities Quarterly, Vol. 9, No. 2: 1–33. www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/vol/9/2/000208/000208.html.Google Scholar
Risam, Roopika. 2017. “Colonial and Postcolonial Digital Humanities Roundtable.” Roopika Risam blog, Oct. 27. http://roopikarisam.com/uncategorized/colonial-and-postcolonial-digital-humanities-roundtable/.Google Scholar
Ross, Shawna. 2018. “Toward a Feminist Modernist Digital Humanities.” Feminist Modernist Studies., Vol. I, No. 3: 211–29. doi: 10.1080/24692921.2018.1505821.Google Scholar
Saussy, Haun. 2004. “Exquisite Cadavers Stitched from Fresh Nightmares: Of Memes, Hives, and Selfish Genes.” Comparative Literature in an Age of Globalization, edited by Saussy, Haun, Johns Hopkins University Press, 342.Google Scholar
Smith, Vanessa. 2016. “Novel Worlds.” Journal of Language, Literature and Culture, Vol. 63, Nos. 2–3: 9195. doi: 10.1080/20512856.2016.1244906.Google Scholar
So, Richard Jean, and Long, Hoyt. 2013. “Network Analysis and the Sociology of Modernism.” Boundary2, Vol. 40, No. 2: 147–82.Google Scholar
Spivak, Gayatri. 1993. Outside in the Teaching Machine. Routledge.Google Scholar
Spivak, Gayatri. 2003. Death of a Discipline. Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
St. Clair, William. 2004. The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Stanford University. 2008. Mapping the Republic of Letters. http://republicofletters.stanford.edu/.Google Scholar
Trumpener, Katie. 2009. “Critical Response I. Paratext and Genre System: A Response to Franco Moretti.” Critical Inquiry, Vol. 36, No. 1: 159–71. JSTOR, ww.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/606126.Google Scholar
Underwood, Ted, and Sellers, Jordan. 2016. “The Longue Durée of Literary Prestige.” Modern Language Quarterly, Vol. 77, No. 3: 321–44. doi: 10,1215.00267929-3570634.Google Scholar
Ungar, Steven. 2004. “Writing in Tongues: Thoughts on the Work of Translation.” Comparative Literature in an Age of Globalization, ed. Saussy, Haun, Johns Hopkins University Press, 127–38.Google Scholar
University of Chicago. N.d. PhiloLogic: The University of Chicago Full-Text System. www.lib.uchicago.edu/efts/ARTFL/philologic/.Google Scholar
Venuti, Lawrence. 1999. The Scandals of Translation: Towards an Ethics of Difference. Routledge.Google Scholar
Warren, Christopher N. 2018. “Historiography’s Two Voices: Data Infrastructure and History at Scale in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB).” Journal of Cultural Analytics ( November 22). https://culturalanalytics.org/article/11031.Google Scholar
Wilkens, Matthew. 2013. “The Geographic Imagination of Civil War-Era American Fiction.” American Literary History, Vol. 25, No. 4: 803–40. Project MUSE, muse.jhu.edu/article/527788.Google Scholar
Wilkens, Matthew. 2017. “Genre, Computation, and the Varieties of Twentieth-Century U.S. Fiction.” Journal of Cultural Analytics, Vol. 1, No. 1. https://culturalanalytics.org/article/11065.Google Scholar
Women Writers Project. 1999–2016. Women Writers Project. Northeastern University. www.wwp.northeastern.edu.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×