[PDF] Using models of lexical style to quantify free indirect discourse in modernist fiction | Semantic Scholar Skip to search formSkip to main content> Semantic Scholar's Logo Search Sign InCreate Free Account You are currently offline. Some features of the site may not work correctly. DOI:10.1093/llc/fqv072 Corpus ID: 11865313Using models of lexical style to quantify free indirect discourse in modernist fiction @article{Brooke2017UsingMO, title={Using models of lexical style to quantify free indirect discourse in modernist fiction}, author={J. Brooke and A. Hammond and Graeme Hirst}, journal={Digit. Scholarsh. Humanit.}, year={2017}, volume={32}, pages={234-250} } J. Brooke, A. Hammond, Graeme Hirst Published 2017 Art, Computer Science Digit. Scholarsh. Humanit. Modernist authors such as Virginia Woolf and James Joyce greatly expanded the use of ‘free indirect discourse’, a form of third-person narration that is strongly influenced by the language of a viewpoint character. Unlike traditional approaches to analyzing characterization using common words, such as those based on Burrows (1987), the nature of free indirect discourse and the sparseness of our data require that we understand the stylistic connotations of rarer words and expressions which… Expand View via Publisher ftp.cs.toronto.edu Save to Library Create Alert Cite Launch Research Feed Share This Paper 11 CitationsBackground Citations 5 Methods Citations 1 View All Tables and Topics from this paper table 1 table 2 table 3 table 4 Collocation Joyce Neural coding Lexicon 11 Citations Citation Type Citation Type All Types Cites Results Cites Methods Cites Background Has PDF Publication Type Author More Filters More Filters Filters Sort by Relevance Sort by Most Influenced Papers Sort by Citation Count Sort by Recency Modeling Modernist Dialogism: Close Reading with Big Data A. Hammond, J. 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