Humanist Discussion Group

Humanist Archives: July 2, 2025, 8:29 a.m. Humanist 39.71 - events: Conference of Computational Literary Studies (Krakow)

				
              Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 39, No. 71.
        Department of Digital Humanities, University of Cologne
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        Date: 2025-07-02 07:22:23+00:00
        From: Willard McCarty <willard.mccarty@mccarty.org.uk>
        Subject: Conference of Computational Literary Studies (Krakow)

CCLS2025 Kraków
4th Annual Conference of Computational Literary Studies
July 3-4, 2025


Dear authors, presenters and participants,

CCLS 2025 will start later this week, on Thursday morning. Please find
the Zoom link and credentials here:

https://zoom.us/j/92423564800?pwd=R9MZHRTz0g9ixy4TOq4y7t8Kc38ak8.1
Meeting ID: 924 2356 4800
Passcode: 406289

We look forward to welcoming you all on-site and online on Thursday,
July 3rd, starting at 8:45am (arrival, registration, welcome) or 9:15am
(opening).

And just as a reminder: You can find the programme here:
https://jcls.io/site/ccls2025/ or in the [information given below]; all
times are local Krakow time, i.e. CEST (UTC+2).

See you soon!
Jan Rybicki (for the LOs) and the JCLS team

________________________________________________________________________________
_
Venue Jagiellonian University, Faculty of Philology
Al. Mickiewicza 9, 31-120 Kraków – Room 505

Local Organizer Jagiellonian Centre for Digital Humanities, Jan Rybicki
Web https://jcls.io/site/ccls2025/
Contact jchc@uj.edu.pl – info@jcls.io
Hashtag #CCLS2025

Conference Programme
Thursday | July 3, 2025

* = Presenting Author

9:15 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. | Opening

9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. | Session 1 [Chair: Henny Sluyter-Gäthje]
■ *Fotis Jannidis, Rabea Kleymann, *Julian Schröter, Heike Zinsmeister:
Do Large
Language Models Understand Literature? Case Studies and Probing
Experiments on German Poetry
■ *Keli Du, Uygar Navruz, Nazan Sınır, Julian Valline, Christof Schöch,
Sarah
Ackerschewski: Reconstructing Shuffled Text. Bad Results for NLP, but
Good News for Using In-Copyright Text
10:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. | Time for Talks & Coffee
11:00 a.m to 12:30 p.m. | Session 2 [Chair: Julian Häußler]
■ *Maria Levchenko: Computational Analysis of Literary Communities:
Event-Based Social Network Study of St. Petersburg 1999-2019
■ *Gilad Aviel Jacobson, Yael Dekel, *Itay Marienberg-Milikowsky: From
Readers to Data: Uncertainty in Computational Literary Citizen Science
■ *Julia Neugarten: A Powerful Hades is an Unpopular Dude: Dynamics of
Power and Agency in Hades/Persephone Fanfiction
12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. | Lunch Break
1:30 p.m to 3:00 p.m. | Session 3 [Chair: Luca Giovannini]
■ *Daniil Skorinkin, Boris Orekhov: The Outward Turn: Geocoding the
Expansion of Fictional Space in Russian 19th Century Literature
■ *Svenja Guhr, Jessica Monaco, Alexander J. Sherman, Matt Warner, Mark
Algee-Hewitt: Making BERT Feel at Home. Modelling Domestic Space in
19th-Century British and Irish Fiction
■ [remote presentation] *Eva Eglāja-Kristsone, *Anda Baklāne, Valdis
Saulespurēns:
Urban Transportation in the Latvian Early Novels or “Why do you use a
19th-century horse-drawn cab when you have a 20th-century taxi?”

3:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. | Time for Talks & Coffee

3:30 p.m to 4:30 p.m. | Session 4 [Chair: Joanna Byszuk]
■ *Rongqian Ma, *Keli Du, Yiwen Zheng: Verse within Prose. Annotating and
Classifying Narrative Functions of Embedded Poems in Chinese Qing
(1644–1912) Vernacular Fiction
■ [remote presentation] *Natalie M. Houston: Rhymefindr: An Historical
Poetics
Method for Identifying Rhymes in Nineteenth-Century English Poetry

4:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. | Time for Talks & Coffee

5:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. | Keynote
■ *Maciej Eder: Text Analysis Made Simple (Kind of), or Ten Years of Stylo
7:00 p.m. | Conference Dinner

Friday | July 4, 2025

8:45 a.m. to 9:15 a.m. | Good Morning Coffee

9:15 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. | Session 5 [Chair: Svenja Guhr]
■ *Katrin Rohrbacher: Opening Worlds: Narrative Beginnings and the Role
of Setting
■ *Noa Visser Solissa, Andreas van Cranenburgh, Federico Pianzola: Event
Detection between Literary Studies and NLP. A Survey, a Narratological
Reflection, and a Case Study
■ *Andrew Piper: Towards a Moral History of the Novel Using Large
Language Models

10:45 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. | Time for Talks & Coffee

11:15 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. | Session 6 [Chair: Daniil Skorinkin]
■ Julia Havrylash, *Christof Schöch: Exploring Measures of
Distinctiveness. An
Evaluation Using Synthetic Texts
■ *Allison Keith, Antonio Rojas Castro, Hanno Ehrlicher, Kerstin Jung,
Sebastian Padó:
A Computation Analysis of Character Archetypes in the Works of Calderón
de la
Barca
■ Yuri Bizzoni, *Pascale Feldkamp, Kristoffer L. Nielbo: Encoding
Imagism? Measuring Literary Imageability, Visuality and Concreteness via
Multimodal Word Embeddings

12:45 p.m. to 1:00 p.m. | Closing

--
Willard McCarty,
Professor emeritus, King's College London;
Editor, Interdisciplinary Research in the Arts,
   Sciences and Humanities (Berghahn); Humanist
www.mccarty.org.uk


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