Lexical shifts, substantive changes, and continuity in State of the Union discourse, 1790–2014 - Incite at Columbia University
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Work
Lexical shifts, substantive changes, and continuity in State of the Union discourse, 1790–2014
- Published August 10, 2015
- Authors Peter Bearman Jean-Phillipe Cointet Alix Rule
- Category Paper
- Forum Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Link doi.org
This study reveals that the entry into World War I in 1917 indexed the decisive transition to the modern period in American political consciousness, ushering in new objects of political discourse, a more rapid pace of change of those objects, and a fundamental reframing of the main tasks of governance. We develop a strategy for identifying meaningful categories in textual corpora that span long historic durées, where terms, concepts, and language use changes. Our approach is able to account for the fluidity of discursive categories over time, and to analyze their continuity by identifying the discursive stream as the object of interest.
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