Description |
xiii, 241 pages ; 24 cm |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Contents |
A language of one's own? Metaphors for language and identity -- Where are you from? -- It's how you say it -- Manufacturing authenticity -- Beginnings. The progenitor -- The enthusiast -- Gospel truth -- Founding fathers -- The renegade -- Who? Anonymous and concealed authorship. Spartacus -- Peeking into the cuckoo's nest -- Diary of a public man -- Thomas Pynchon, technical writer -- The truth about Double falsehood -- Which? Tales of disrupted authorship. A dispute in Oz -- Poe-pourri -- A legacy from Lewis? -- A Brontë imbroglio -- It's still a mockingbird -- Patterson's patterns -- It's a crime! A forensic linguistics casebook. The originator -- The man in the woods -- A (beauty) queen's ransom -- Truth in texting -- Fake! Forgeries and misattributions. The counterfeit decree -- Consolation prize -- Solemn mockery -- Clemens before Twain -- Pickett lines -- Oops! Misses and false positives. An elegy for an elegy -- The resister -- A Neopolitan mystery -- The maverick -- Anthrax and hubris -- Ghost stories: a voice of one's own? Giving up the ghost -- French twist -- Tall tales from the frontier -- Ghosts in the machine. |
Summary |
"How much of ourselves do we disclose when we speak or write? A person's accent may reveal, for example, whether they hail from Australia, or Ireland, or Mississippi. But it's not just where we were born-we divulge all sorts of information about ourselves and our identity through language. Level of education, gender, age, and even aspects of our personality can all be reliably determined by our vocabulary and grammar. To those who know what to look for, we give ourselves away every time we open our mouths or tap on a keyboard. But how unique is a person's linguistic identity? Can language be used to identify a specific person? To identify-or to exonerate-a murder suspect? To determine who authored a particular book? The answer to all these questions is yes. Forensic and computational linguists have developed methods that allow linguistic fingerprinting to be used in law enforcement. Similar techniques are used by literary scholars to identify the authors of anonymous or contested works of literature. Many people have heard that linguistic analysis helped to catch the Unabomber, or to unmask an anonymous editorialist-but how is it done? Linguistic Fingerprints will explain how these methods were developed and how they are used to solve forensic and literary mysteries. But these techniques aren't perfect, and the book will also include some cautionary tales about mistaken linguistic identity"-- Provided by publisher. |
Subject |
Stylometry.
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Individual differences.
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Identity (Psychology)
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Psycholinguistics.
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Linguistic analysis (Linguistics)
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Forensic linguistics -- Case studies.
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Authorship, Disputed -- Case studies.
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LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Psycholinguistics.
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Authorship, Disputed. (OCoLC)fst00822483
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Forensic linguistics. (OCoLC)fst00931973
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Identity (Psychology) (OCoLC)fst00966892
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Individual differences. (OCoLC)fst00970304
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Linguistic analysis (Linguistics) (OCoLC)fst00999166
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Psycholinguistics. (OCoLC)fst01081323
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Genre/Form |
Case studies. (OCoLC)fst01423765
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Informational works. (OCoLC)fst01919930
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Informational works.
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Case studies.
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Other Form: |
Online version: Kreuz, Roger J. Linguistic fingerprints Lanham, MD : Prometheus, [2023] 9781633888982 (DLC) 2022053675 |
ISBN |
9781633888975 (hardcover) |
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1633888975 (hardcover) |
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