For many scholars who are not themselves historians of political thought, the major use of official records is as a benchmark for studying other kinds of development. Official records of modern political bodies are widely available in digitized form and provide one of the primary sources with which digital historians have trained their methods. This article applies the process of reducing textual expressions to regular form to investigate how British members of Parliament talked about empire in extremely general terms: which places did they mention, how much, and in what context. Reducing parliamentary speech to regular occurrences makes it possible to quantitatively generalize about regular and predictable structures—for example, the Eur...
The ways in which politicians have discussed who, what, and where was considered “uncivilized’” acro...
This paper discusses the pivotal moments of British imperial history from the eighties to today afte...
Parliamentary proceedings reflect our history from centuries ago to the present day. They exist in a...
For many scholars who are not themselves historians of political thought, the major use of official ...
In this paper, we explore how sociocultural changes were reflected in the parliamentary record, a ge...
Includes extra numbered pages *333-338; numbers 665-684 duplicated in paging."A general view of gove...
Tensions between the people and parliament over representation are a normal feature of representativ...
Summary: This article proposes that historians and political theorists should exploit parliamentary ...
This chapter gives a detailed textual and linguistic history of Hansard, the records of debates of t...
The transcripts of UK parliamentary debates, offered by the Hansard Online collection are a major re...
We conduct an analysis of the link between colloquialisation and democratisation in debates in the B...
This chapter explores a historical distant reading strategy of British Parliamentary discourse. It u...
The use of computational approaches in history is not new (Boonstra et al 2004). However, until fair...
Can digital methods resolve major debates in the historiography of political agency? In recent decad...
Intellectual history is traditionally text-based. Sometimes regarded as synonymous with the history ...
The ways in which politicians have discussed who, what, and where was considered “uncivilized’” acro...
This paper discusses the pivotal moments of British imperial history from the eighties to today afte...
Parliamentary proceedings reflect our history from centuries ago to the present day. They exist in a...
For many scholars who are not themselves historians of political thought, the major use of official ...
In this paper, we explore how sociocultural changes were reflected in the parliamentary record, a ge...
Includes extra numbered pages *333-338; numbers 665-684 duplicated in paging."A general view of gove...
Tensions between the people and parliament over representation are a normal feature of representativ...
Summary: This article proposes that historians and political theorists should exploit parliamentary ...
This chapter gives a detailed textual and linguistic history of Hansard, the records of debates of t...
The transcripts of UK parliamentary debates, offered by the Hansard Online collection are a major re...
We conduct an analysis of the link between colloquialisation and democratisation in debates in the B...
This chapter explores a historical distant reading strategy of British Parliamentary discourse. It u...
The use of computational approaches in history is not new (Boonstra et al 2004). However, until fair...
Can digital methods resolve major debates in the historiography of political agency? In recent decad...
Intellectual history is traditionally text-based. Sometimes regarded as synonymous with the history ...
The ways in which politicians have discussed who, what, and where was considered “uncivilized’” acro...
This paper discusses the pivotal moments of British imperial history from the eighties to today afte...
Parliamentary proceedings reflect our history from centuries ago to the present day. They exist in a...