On September 29, 2024, the USC U.S.-China Institute hosted a workshop at the Huntington’s Chinese garden, offering K-12 educators hands-on insights into using the garden as a teaching tool. With expert presentations, a guided tour, and new resources, the event explored how Chinese gardens' rich history and cultural significance can be integrated into classrooms. Interested in learning more? Click below for details on the workshop and upcoming programs for educators.
Narrative as Algorithm: A Macroanalysis of Modern Japanese and Chinese Texts
Stanford University Center for East Asian Studies hosts a talk with Richard Jean So and Hoyt Long
Where
Richard Jean So, Assistant Professor, Department of English, University of Chicago
Hoyt Long, Associate Professor, East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Chicago
This talk demonstrates how large-scale text analysis can provide new evidence for old questions in the cultural historiography of modern Japan and China. Namely, the question of how exposure to Western intellectual and socio-economic systems gave rise to new forms of self-expression and new circuits of cultural exchange. We build on the idea that narrative form can be modeled by measurable linguistic traits, and that such models help to understand discursive relationality at scale. Beginning with the Japanese shish?setsu (or I-novel), we test whether the genre exhibits a consistent narrative logic across hundreds of examples, and in comparison to other popular genres. Specifically, we test a model of narrative form that classifies texts based on how much their lexical content shifts. Do they follow an arc of self conversion or crisis such that the language of the self changes over time? Or do the words remain the same, suggesting stasis or immobility? In part two, we test this model on modern Chinese fiction, in particular Romanticist fiction from the 1920s that was heavily influenced by developments in Japan. Many of these writers spent their formative years there at the height of the shish?setsu. Computation provides a way to study this complex cultural relation at the macroscale to see where Chinese writers did and did not align with their Japanese counterparts. More radically, it provides insight into the evolution and differentiation of archetypal narrative forms within and across national contexts.
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