Abolitionist Networks: Modeling Language Change in Nineteenth-Century Activist Newspapers
Sandeep Soni, Lauren Klein, Jacob Eisenstein

TL;DR
This study uses diachronic word embeddings to analyze how abolitionist newspapers influenced each other's language over time, revealing key leaders and the role of women-led papers in shaping abolitionist discourse.
Contribution
It introduces a quantitative network approach to identify influence pathways in lexical semantic changes among 19th-century abolitionist newspapers, highlighting the leadership of women-led publications.
Findings
Women-led newspapers like THE PROVINCIAL FREEMAN and THE LILY led many semantic changes.
The influence network reveals distinct leaders and followers in language adoption.
Women-led papers played a central role in shaping abolitionist discourse.
Abstract
The abolitionist movement of the nineteenth-century United States remains among the most significant social and political movements in US history. Abolitionist newspapers played a crucial role in spreading information and shaping public opinion around a range of issues relating to the abolition of slavery. These newspapers also serve as a primary source of information about the movement for scholars today, resulting in powerful new accounts of the movement and its leaders. This paper supplements recent qualitative work on the role of women in abolition's vanguard, as well as the role of the Black press, with a quantitative text modeling approach. Using diachronic word embeddings, we identify which newspapers tended to lead lexical semantic innovations -- the introduction of new usages of specific words -- and which newspapers tended to follow. We then aggregate the evidence across…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputational and Text Analysis Methods · Social and Cultural Dynamics · Electoral Systems and Political Participation
