In this guest post, Susan Hunston, a Professor at the University of Birmingham and member of the RC21 advisory board, and Sui Xin from Capital Normal University in Beijing present their talk from the ICAME 45 conference, bridging the gap between concordance reading and linguistic theory. It is sometimes really frustrating that a single observed … Continue reading “Susan Hunston and Sui Xin. Accounting for what is observed in concordance lines”
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Laurence Anthony. Breaking New Ground: AI-Enhanced Concordance Analysis
In this guest post, Laurence Anthony, Professor at Waseda University (Japan) and a member of the RC21 advisory board, summarizes his talk on concordance reading at ICAME 45 conference and discusses the future of this technique. In the RC21 workshop at the ICAME 45 conference held in Vigo, Spain, I had the honor and pleasure … Continue reading “Laurence Anthony. Breaking New Ground: AI-Enhanced Concordance Analysis”
Diversity and Innovation in Concordance Organization and Interpretation: Workshop at ICAME45
Concordance reading is a cornerstone of corpus linguistics, facilitating in-depth analysis and interpretation of linguistic data. This topic was the focus of a pre-workshop held on July 18, 2024, as part of the 45th ICAME conference in Vigo. The workshop, organized by the Reading Concordances in the 21st Century (RC21) project team, featured six presentations … Continue reading “Diversity and Innovation in Concordance Organization and Interpretation: Workshop at ICAME45”
Deutsche Romane des 19. Jahrhunderts (DE19): A nineteenth-century reference corpus of German novels for contrastive analysis
We are excited to introduce Deutsche Romane des 19. Jahrhunderts (DE19), a 4.5-million-word corpus of nineteenth-century German novels designed to be comparable to the 19th Century Reference Corpus of English (EN19). DE19 is available to download now and will soon be accessible via the CLiC web app (Mahlberg et al., 2020). Supporting contrastive concordance reading We … Continue reading “Deutsche Romane des 19. Jahrhunderts (DE19): A nineteenth-century reference corpus of German novels for contrastive analysis”
What is the #RC21 project all about?
Organising and interpreting concordance lines via a Key Word in Context (KWIC) display format is probably the most central technique in corpus linguistics. This kind of vertical ‘reading’ helps analysts spot patterns in large samples of language, adding a qualitative dimension to studies of frequency, collocation, and keyness. Project background The use of computers to find … Continue reading “What is the #RC21 project all about?”