Abstract

ABSTRACTThis article describes the background and premises of the AHRC-funded project, ‘The Linguistic DNA of Modern Western Thought’. We offer an empirical, encyclopaedic approach to historical semantics regarding ‘conceptual history’, i.e. the history of concepts that shape thought, culture and society in a particular period. We relate the project to traditional work in conceptual and semantic history and define our object of study as the discursive concept, a category of meaning encoded linguistically as a cluster of expressions that co-occur in discourse. We describe our principal data source, EEBO-TCP, and introduce our key research interests, namely, the contexts of conceptual change, the semantic structure of lexical fields and the nature of lexicalisation pressure. We outline our computational processes, which build upon the theoretical definition of discursive concepts, to discover the linguistically encoded forms underpinning the discursive concepts we seek to identify in EEBO-TCP. Finally, we share preliminary results via a worked example, exploring the discursive contexts in which paradigmatic terms of key cultural concepts emerge. We consider the extent to which particular genres, discourses and users in the early modern period make paradigms, and examine the extent to which these contexts determine the characteristics of key concepts.

Highlights

  • Linguistic DNA is a three-year AHRC-funded collaborative research project in historical semantics and conceptual change in early modern English discourse.1 The overarching objective is to discover relationships between words and ideas that exceed human intuition, with the help of computational methods for analysing big data.This article lays out the background and premises of the project and its principal aims and themes

  • Encyclopaedic approach to historical semantics regarding ‘conceptual history’, i.e. the history of concepts that shape thought, culture and society in a particular period

  • We outline our computational processes, which build upon the theoretical definition of discursive concepts, to discover the linguistically encoded forms underpinning the discursive concepts we seek to identify in EEBO-TCP

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Summary

Introduction

Linguistic DNA is a three-year AHRC-funded collaborative research project in historical semantics and conceptual change in early modern English discourse. The overarching objective is to discover relationships between words and ideas that exceed human intuition, with the help of computational methods for analysing big data. We contextualise the project in relation to traditional work in conceptual and semantic history, highlighting the innovations forwarded by Linguistic DNA. We define our object of study as the discursive concept, a category of meaning which is encoded linguistically as a cluster of expressions that co-occur in discourse. It is encyclopaedic in data terms and as a set of expressions, it is not co-terminous with the keyword. We outline our computational processes, which build upon the theoretical definition of discursive concepts, to discover the linguistically encoded forms that underpin the discursive concepts we seek to identify in EEBO-TCP. We share preliminary results in the form of a worked example

Background
Epistemology
Data: The universe of early modern English printed discourse
Contexts of concepts and conceptual change
The semantic structure of lexical fields
Lexicalisation pressure
Processes of concept modelling
Some preliminary results
Conclusion
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