Drama, at least according to the Aristotelian view, is effective inasmuch as it successfully mirrors real aspects of human behavior. This leads to the hypothesis that successful dramas will portray fictional social networks that have the same properties as those typical of human beings across ages and cultures. We outline a methodology for investigating this hypothesis and use it to examine ten of Shakespeare's plays. The cliques and groups portrayed in the plays correspond closely to those which have been observed in spontaneous human interaction, including in hunter-gatherer societies, and the networks of the plays exhibit "small world" properties of the type which have been observed in many human-made and natural systems
A pervasive sense of alienation infected the lives of women in the Early Modern period. William Shak...
Centrality measures derived from character networks can be used to detect the main characters in a p...
This essay discusses the theoretical implications of a recent experiment with game-based social medi...
Drama, at least according to the Aristotelian view, is effective inasmuch as it successfully mirrors...
Networks are popular models for representing interactions between entities in systems, such as in so...
Decades ago, alongside more traditional structuralist paradigms that were largely based on linguisti...
In its introduction and four chapters, “Shakespeare’s Networks” demonstrates that Shakespeare’s soci...
Abstract—Automatic methods for analyzing sentiment and its movement through a play’s social network ...
Since the 1960s, chaos theory has become an important but controversial tool used by scientists and ...
Networks are popular models for representing interactions between entities in systems, such as in so...
In different plays Shakespeare often treats similar subject matter in radically contrasting ways. A ...
Literary works can be analysed in the framework of network theories, as proposed for instance by the...
This paper examines the generation and analysis of a social network produced from Shakespeare’s play...
In our present mediascape, performances of Shakespeare on social networks proliferate. Changing Mode...
Blogpost, http://www.martingrandjean.ch/network-visualization-shakespeare/Are Shakespeare's tragedie...
A pervasive sense of alienation infected the lives of women in the Early Modern period. William Shak...
Centrality measures derived from character networks can be used to detect the main characters in a p...
This essay discusses the theoretical implications of a recent experiment with game-based social medi...
Drama, at least according to the Aristotelian view, is effective inasmuch as it successfully mirrors...
Networks are popular models for representing interactions between entities in systems, such as in so...
Decades ago, alongside more traditional structuralist paradigms that were largely based on linguisti...
In its introduction and four chapters, “Shakespeare’s Networks” demonstrates that Shakespeare’s soci...
Abstract—Automatic methods for analyzing sentiment and its movement through a play’s social network ...
Since the 1960s, chaos theory has become an important but controversial tool used by scientists and ...
Networks are popular models for representing interactions between entities in systems, such as in so...
In different plays Shakespeare often treats similar subject matter in radically contrasting ways. A ...
Literary works can be analysed in the framework of network theories, as proposed for instance by the...
This paper examines the generation and analysis of a social network produced from Shakespeare’s play...
In our present mediascape, performances of Shakespeare on social networks proliferate. Changing Mode...
Blogpost, http://www.martingrandjean.ch/network-visualization-shakespeare/Are Shakespeare's tragedie...
A pervasive sense of alienation infected the lives of women in the Early Modern period. William Shak...
Centrality measures derived from character networks can be used to detect the main characters in a p...
This essay discusses the theoretical implications of a recent experiment with game-based social medi...