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@proceedings{1783379, author = {Shaw, Robert Laurence John and Hampejs, Tomáš and Zbíral, David}, booktitle = {International Medieval Congress 2021, 5 - 9 July, Leeds, UK}, keywords = {inquisition; punishment; heresy; medieval; Middle Ages; quantiative analysis; semantic text modelling; qualitative comparative analysis (QCA)}, language = {eng}, title = {Social Connections, Perceptions, and Inquisition Punishments in Medieval Languedoc : A Computational Analysis}, url = {https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc/imc-2021/}, year = {2021} }
TY - CONF ID - 1783379 AU - Shaw, Robert Laurence John - Hampejs, Tomáš - Zbíral, David PY - 2021 TI - Social Connections, Perceptions, and Inquisition Punishments in Medieval Languedoc : A Computational Analysis KW - inquisition KW - punishment KW - heresy KW - medieval KW - Middle Ages KW - quantiative analysis KW - semantic text modelling KW - qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) UR - https://www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imc/imc-2021/ N2 - Despite significant interest in the way that medieval inquisitors approached the task of quelling religious dissidence – above all the way they detected or even “constructed” heresy among their subjects – the factors that influenced the precise weight of the punishments they meted out have thus far received little systematic attention. Computational analysis of inquisition records, however, can potentially transform our understanding of this field. It can be assumed that inquisitors aimed, at least in part, to punish in accordance with the type, duration, and repetition of heretical activity they perceived. But given that inquisitors sought to root out what they saw as a social “disease” and the extent to which they recorded details of social context and interaction, we must also ask to what extent medieval inquisitors were influenced by what they perceived to be the social position of their suspects. If some attention has already been given to the influence of gender and social status, one can go further, both through more systematic analysis, and through a greater focus on questions of social connectivity. Were dissidents punished differently for knowing famous heretics, or committing actions in concert with others? Did recognised social ties to other sentenced or suspected individuals warrant graver sentences? ER -
SHAW, Robert Laurence John, Tomáš HAMPEJS a David ZBÍRAL. Social Connections, Perceptions, and Inquisition Punishments in Medieval Languedoc : A Computational Analysis. In \textit{International Medieval Congress 2021, 5 - 9 July, Leeds, UK}. 2021.
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