Benjamin Gittel
One of the most enduring narratives in European history since Rousseau is the narrative of a general decline or collective loss in a changing world. Thus, 76% of Europeans believe that “[t]he world used to be a much better place" (eupinions 2022). The project examines how the "normatively charged mode of reflection" (Georg Bollenbeck) of cultural critique underlying such attitudes manifests itself in literature. The overarching aim is to describe this hitherto elusive phenomenon in terms of literary theory and narratology and to analyze its variants and diachronic development on a broad empirical basis using computational methods.
Anyone dealing with the complex of cultural critique (germ. “Kulturkritik”) and critique of modernity in literary texts quickly encounters a whole field of terms that are used as a matter of course in literary criticism: "decadence", "critique of progress", "contemporary critique", "social critique", “regional heritage art” ("Heimatkunst"), "cultural critique", "cultural pessimism", "literature of the conservative revolution", "critique of modernity", “worldview literature” ("Weltanschaungsliteratur"), “critique of contemporary affairs” ("Zeitkritik"), “critique of civilization”, etc. However, most of these terms, which presumably only have in common that the texts falling under them articulate certain experiences of loss, have so far not been clearly defined in research and oscillate in an unexplained way between genre and thematic terms.
This is where the project comes in by combining findings from literary studies, computational modeling and quantitative and qualitative text analysis in order to: (i) identify attributions of such terms to literary works, (ii) determine similarities and differences between the resulting corpora, (iii) identify textual correlates of these terms that are significant in literary studies (such as references, evaluations and semantic codings), (iv) develop computational models to automatically identify such features and their interrelations, and finally (v) model their change in literary history.