<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//NLM//DTD JATS (Z39.96) Journal Publishing DTD v1.2 20190208//EN" "https://jats.nlm.nih.gov/publishing/1.2/JATS-journalpublishing1-mathml3.dtd">
<article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" article-type="research-article" dtd-version="1.2" xml:lang="en">
  <front>
    <journal-meta>
      <journal-id journal-id-type="publisher-id">1832</journal-id>
      <journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>Journal of Cultural Analytics</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
      <issn pub-type="epub">2371-4549</issn>
      <publisher>
        <publisher-name>Center for Digital Humanities, Princeton University</publisher-name>
      </publisher>
      <self-uri xlink:href="https://culturalanalytics.org/">Website: Journal of Cultural Analytics</self-uri>
    </journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">30009</article-id>
      <article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.22148/001c.30009</article-id>
      <article-categories>
        <subj-group subj-group-type="heading">
          <subject>Article</subject>
        </subj-group>
      </article-categories>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>The Generative Dissensus of Reading the Feminist Novel, 1995-2020: A Computational Analysis of Interpretive Communities</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <name>
            <surname>Mendelman</surname>
            <given-names>Lisa</given-names>
          </name>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="author-aff-1">
            <sup>1</sup>
          </xref>
        </contrib>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <name>
            <surname>Mukamal</surname>
            <given-names>Anna</given-names>
          </name>
          <xref ref-type="aff" rid="author-aff-2">
            <sup>2</sup>
          </xref>
        </contrib>
      </contrib-group>
      <aff id="author-aff-1">
        <label>1</label>
        <institution-wrap>
          <institution content-type="edu">Menlo College</institution>
        </institution-wrap>
        <institution-wrap>
          <institution-id institution-id-type="ROR">https://ror.org/0182em051</institution-id>
        </institution-wrap>
      </aff>
      <aff id="author-aff-2">
        <label>2</label>
        <institution-wrap>
          <institution content-type="edu">Stanford University</institution>
        </institution-wrap>
        <institution-wrap>
          <institution-id institution-id-type="ROR">https://ror.org/00f54p054</institution-id>
        </institution-wrap>
      </aff>
      <pub-date publication-format="electronic" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2021-11-19">
        <day>19</day>
        <month>11</month>
        <year>2021</year>
      </pub-date>
      <pub-date publication-format="electronic" date-type="collection" iso-8601-date="2021-12-02">
        <year>2021</year>
      </pub-date>
      <volume>6</volume>
      <issue seq="2">3</issue>
      <issue-title>Articles in 2021</issue-title>
      <elocation-id>30009</elocation-id>
      <history>
        <date date-type="received" iso-8601-date="2020-11-10">
          <day>10</day>
          <month>11</month>
          <year>2020</year>
        </date>
        <date date-type="accepted" iso-8601-date="2021-03-12">
          <day>12</day>
          <month>3</month>
          <year>2021</year>
        </date>
      </history>
      <permissions>
        <license license-type="open-access">
          <ali:license_ref xmlns:ali="http://www.niso.org/schemas/ali/1.0/">
              http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
            </ali:license_ref>
          <license-p>
              This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the <ext-link ext-link-type="uri" xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0">Creative Commons Attribution License (4.0)</ext-link>, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
            </license-p>
        </license>
      </permissions>
      <self-uri content-type="pdf" xlink:href="https://culturalanalytics.org/article/30009.pdf"/>
      <self-uri content-type="xml" xlink:href="https://culturalanalytics.org/article/30009.xml"/>
      <self-uri content-type="json" xlink:href="https://culturalanalytics.org/article/30009.json"/>
      <self-uri content-type="html" xlink:href="https://culturalanalytics.org/article/30009"/>
      <abstract>
        <p>This article furthers ongoing work on the merits of the feminist novel’s intrinsic variability by probing its dynamics in four publishing contexts: contemporary anglophone literary criticism, prestigious review publications, marketing materials, and online book reviews by social readers. We explore how these interpretive communities converge and diverge in their assessments of feminist fiction over the past twenty-five years by evaluating articles from the MLA International Bibliography, book reviews in The New York Times, The New Yorker, Times Literary Supp-lement, and other prominent periodicals, blurbs from Amazon, and Goodreads reviews. We trace the feminist novel’s ambivalent fates—or rather, feminist novels’ ambivalent fates—in and across these four domains. To do so, we engage computational methods of topic modeling, most distinctive word analysis, and named entity recognition. We synthesize these quantitative results with qualitative attention to provocative examples from our corpus. In so doing, we consider how literary scholars can develop more robust understandings of what feminism and feminist fiction mean to contemporary readers and what we stand to gain by bringing this diverse interpretive labor into our scholarly conversations.</p>
      </abstract>
      <kwd-group>
        <kwd>gender</kwd>
        <kwd>English literature</kwd>
        <kwd>readers</kwd>
        <kwd>feminism</kwd>
        <kwd>novels</kwd>
      </kwd-group>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
</article>
