https://www.dialectfiction.org/
Scholars and fans of nineteenth-century British literature (as well as
those with an interest in the representations of different dialects and
cultures) may be interested in Dialect in British Fiction, a digital
humanities project from the University of Sheffield. This project
describes itself as "a database which has been designed as a tool for
identifying and analysing the representation of dialect in 100 novels
published between 1800 and 1836," a time period during which literary
dialect usage was just beginning to be popularized. Dialect in British
Fiction seeks to examine why dialect speech is represented in English
literature and why it has been represented in these particular ways.
Visitors can query the database by searching the metadata for the novels
and their characters or by searching the actual text of speech extracts
from each novel, which have been tagged with markers such as the
character's place of origin and social role. Dialect in British Fiction
was led by Dr. Jane Hodson, a professor in the School of English at the
University of Sheffield, with funding through the Arts & Humanities
Research Council
via https://scout.wisc.edu/archives/r50545/dialect_in_british_fiction_1800-1836
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