Skip to main content

RSHA

  • Home
  • About
  • Schools & Centres
  • People
    • Director
    • Executive
    • Professional staff
  • Study with us
    • Heritage and Museum Studies HDR Program
    • Graduate coursework
  • Events
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
    • Past events
  • Research
    • Coombs Fellowship
    • Coombs Indigenous Fellowship
    • Coombs Fellows Archive
    • Lalor
  • News
  • Contact us

Networks

  • ANU Health Humanities Network
    • About
    • News and Events
    • Steering Group
    • Contact
  • Francophone Research Cluster
    • Publications
  • MemoryHub@ANU
    • People
      • MemoryHub Convenors
      • ANU Network Members
      • PhD Students
      • Visitors
    • Publications
    • Events
      • Symposium
      • Reading group
      • Webinars
      • Workshops
    • Contact us

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program
  • School of Archaeology & Anthropology
  • School of Art & Design
  • School of Literature, Languages & Linguistics
  • School of Music
  • Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies
  • Humanities Research Centre
  • Institute for Communication in Health Care

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeUpcoming EventsDigital Literary Mapping: A Chronotopic Approach Or, How To Journey Through The Looking Glass With Alice
Digital Literary Mapping: A Chronotopic Approach or, How to Journey Through the Looking Glass with Alice
Digital Literary Mapping: A Chronotopic Approach or, How to Journey Through the Looking Glass with Alice
Please join us for CuSPP Seminar in person (ADH Conference room) and online on Thursday, 8 August from 1-2pm. Please refer to the CuSPP email or email Wesley.Lim@anu.edu.au for the link.

This paper presents new ways of mapping literature by means of digital tools for the Twenty-First Century emerging from a major funded project for mapping literary timespace (Chronotopic Cartographies).  It argues for the mapping of space relationally in non-referential ways by means of “literary topology”.  It articulates an integrated visual-verbal method of interpretation that combines the close reading of spatial meanings and structures within a text with analysis of the map series generated out of that same text, in an iterative structure.  The second half of the paper puts theory into practice through a visual-verbal reading of Lewis Carroll’s Through The Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There.

Sally Bushell is Professor of Romantic and Victorian Literature in the Department of English Literature & Creative Writing, Lancaster University in the UK.  She is currently a Visiting Professor at ANU funded by the RSHA.  Her research is concerned with literary spatiality and the mapping of texts in a range of ways (across process; empirically; digitally). She is also interested in digital and spatial projects for the mapping of literature. She was PI on the AHRC Funded project: Chronotopic Cartographies and the AHRC Follow On Fund project Steampunk Sherlock Holmes in Minecraft. She co-creator of an educational project (Litcraft) that re-engages reluctant readers with reading by using Minecraft to map literary worlds.  Her most recent books are: Reading and Mapping: Spatialising The Text (Cambridge, 2020) and New Approaches to Digital Literary Mapping: Chronotopic Cartography (Forthcoming, Cambridge Elements series, 2024).

Date & time

  • Thu 08 Aug 2024, 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm

Location

Room 128, Conference Room, A D Hope Building

Speakers

  • Professor Sally Bushell

Contact

  •  Wesley Lim
     Send email