"The greatest Poet that has [n]ever existed" -- A Narrative Networks Analysis of the Poems of Ossian
Ralph Kenna, Padraig MacCarron, Thierry Platini, Justin Tonra, and, Joseph Yose

TL;DR
This paper presents an interdisciplinary analysis of Ossian's poems using complex network methods, bridging humanities and sciences to uncover universal narrative properties and foster collaborative research.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of network science to compare epic narratives, demonstrating interdisciplinary insights between humanities and physics.
Findings
Identification of universal network properties in epic texts
Comparison of Ossian's poems with other mythological narratives
Promotion of interdisciplinary collaboration in scientific and humanistic research
Abstract
Surprising as it may seem, applications of statistical methods to physics were inspired by the social sciences, which in turn are linked to the humanities. So perhaps it is not as unlikely as it might first appear for a group of statistical physicists and humanists to come together to investigate one of the subjects of Thomas Jefferson's poetic interests from a scientific point of view. And that is the nature of this article: a collaborative interdisciplinary analysis of the works of a figure Jefferson described as a ''rude bard of the North'' and ''the greatest Poet that has ever existed.'' In 2012, a subset of this team embraced an increase in interdisciplinary methods to apply the new science of complex networks to longstanding questions in comparative mythology. Investigations of network structures embedded in epic narratives allowed universal properties to be identified and ancient…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Text Analysis Techniques
