Affiliation:
1. Stanford University Associate Professor of Digital Humanities and English at where he directs the Stanford Literary Lab
2. Menlo College Associate Professor of English and Digital Humanities at
3. Coastal Carolina University Assistant Professor of Digital Culture and Design in the Department of English at
4. Adelphi University Doctoral student in Clinical Psychology at the Derner School of Psychology at
Abstract
Abstract
This article uses quantitative methods of cultural analytics in order to trace points of contact between the discourse of therapy as it emerges in the encounter between patient and clinician and in the language of twentieth-century US novels. Our computational analysis moves away from considering therapy as a diagnostic tool, either for characters or authors, and towards thinking about therapy as a discourse: a set of words (semantics) in a pattern of proportions (parts of speech, grammar). Our computational models identify excerpts of novels that contain therapy discourse and, in so doing, reveal the ways that the discourse of therapy exists in the novel beyond its expected pathways of entry (through setting, plot, and characterization). In close reading these excerpts, we observe the consistent use of a representational aesthetics of psychological interiority, one that endeavors to approximate a realistic experience of living in and through our interactions with one another. We propose that therapy as a discourse is not strictly a clinical endeavor but is more broadly an intersubjective enterprise—a process-oriented linguistic phenomenon that arises in a more heterogeneous canon of novels than those in which critics have traditionally thought to look.
Using cultural analytical methods to explore therapy as a discourse helps us . . . to consider therapy and the novel as interdependent terms of analysis and at heretofore impossible scales.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,History,Cultural Studies