Rhythmic entropy as a measure of rhythmic diversity (The example of the Russian iambic tetrameter)
This paper examines the frequencies of the rhythmic forms of the iambic tetrameter in the oeuvre of various Russian poets of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. The assumption is that this parameter describes the perceptible peculiarities of rhythm better than the so called stress profile. Entropy is...
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University of Tartu Press
2016-09-01
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doaj-5048e7c97f1448fb88d226e6b977d3112020-11-25T03:49:29ZengUniversity of Tartu PressStudia Metrica et Poetica2346-69012346-691X2016-09-013110.12697/smp.2016.3.1.02Rhythmic entropy as a measure of rhythmic diversity (The example of the Russian iambic tetrameter)Andrei Dobritsyn0Université de Lausanne, Section de langues et civilisations slaves et de l’Asie du SudThis paper examines the frequencies of the rhythmic forms of the iambic tetrameter in the oeuvre of various Russian poets of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. The assumption is that this parameter describes the perceptible peculiarities of rhythm better than the so called stress profile. Entropy is proposed as a measure of rhythmic diversity. Variations of the quantitative value of rhythmic entropy in the works of different poets (or the same poet in different periods of his/her poetic career) are due to the changes in the preference for particular rhythmic forms. It is demonstrated that in the majority of poets the entropy in their early poems is much lower than in their mature period. In order to assess the difference between poetic rhythm and natural language rhythm, the Kullback–Leibler divergence is calculated. It is the divergence of the distribution of rhythmic forms in a particular poem or group of poems from the modelled (language-based or speech-based) distribution of the same forms. It is revealed that in some poets of the 1920s, the poetic rhythm is very close to the “natural” distribution of the rhythmic forms of the iambic tetrameter. It is also shown that the rhythm of stanzaic and text endings differs from the rhythm of a stanza or the entire poem (the endings have a different level of entropy and a different divergence from natural speech).https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/smp/article/view/13039Russian iambic tetrameterrhythmic formsfrequencyentropymodelled distributionKullback–Leibler divergence |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Andrei Dobritsyn |
spellingShingle |
Andrei Dobritsyn Rhythmic entropy as a measure of rhythmic diversity (The example of the Russian iambic tetrameter) Studia Metrica et Poetica Russian iambic tetrameter rhythmic forms frequency entropy modelled distribution Kullback–Leibler divergence |
author_facet |
Andrei Dobritsyn |
author_sort |
Andrei Dobritsyn |
title |
Rhythmic entropy as a measure of rhythmic diversity (The example of the Russian iambic tetrameter) |
title_short |
Rhythmic entropy as a measure of rhythmic diversity (The example of the Russian iambic tetrameter) |
title_full |
Rhythmic entropy as a measure of rhythmic diversity (The example of the Russian iambic tetrameter) |
title_fullStr |
Rhythmic entropy as a measure of rhythmic diversity (The example of the Russian iambic tetrameter) |
title_full_unstemmed |
Rhythmic entropy as a measure of rhythmic diversity (The example of the Russian iambic tetrameter) |
title_sort |
rhythmic entropy as a measure of rhythmic diversity (the example of the russian iambic tetrameter) |
publisher |
University of Tartu Press |
series |
Studia Metrica et Poetica |
issn |
2346-6901 2346-691X |
publishDate |
2016-09-01 |
description |
This paper examines the frequencies of the rhythmic forms of the iambic tetrameter in the oeuvre of various Russian poets of the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. The assumption is that this parameter describes the perceptible peculiarities of rhythm better than the so called stress profile. Entropy is proposed as a measure of rhythmic diversity. Variations of the quantitative value of rhythmic entropy in the works of different poets (or the same poet in different periods of his/her poetic career) are due to the changes in the preference for particular rhythmic forms. It is demonstrated that in the majority of poets the entropy in their early poems is much lower than in their mature period. In order to assess the difference between poetic rhythm and natural language rhythm, the Kullback–Leibler divergence is calculated. It is the divergence of the distribution of rhythmic forms in a particular poem or group of poems from the modelled (language-based or speech-based) distribution of the same forms. It is revealed that in some poets of the 1920s, the poetic rhythm is very close to the “natural” distribution of the rhythmic forms of the iambic tetrameter. It is also shown that the rhythm of stanzaic and text endings differs from the rhythm of a stanza or the entire poem (the endings have a different level of entropy and a different divergence from natural speech). |
topic |
Russian iambic tetrameter rhythmic forms frequency entropy modelled distribution Kullback–Leibler divergence |
url |
https://ojs.utlib.ee/index.php/smp/article/view/13039 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT andreidobritsyn rhythmicentropyasameasureofrhythmicdiversitytheexampleoftherussianiambictetrameter |
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1724495169780187136 |