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Between Century and Poet: Graph-Based Lexical Semantic Change in Persian Poetry

arXiv:2604.0667472.1h-index: 2
Predicted impact top 88% in CL · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
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This work addresses the challenge of capturing nuanced semantic shifts in historical literary texts for digital humanities researchers, offering a more interpretable method, though it is incremental in applying graph techniques to a specific domain.

The study tackled the problem of modeling semantic change in Persian poetry by using graph-based neighborhood analysis instead of vector displacement, revealing distinct patterns of change for words like Night, Earth, and Heart, with concrete findings such as Night being more time-sensitive and Earth more poet-sensitive.

Meaning in Persian poetry is both historical and relational. Words persist through literary tradition while shifting their force through changing constellations of neighbors, rhetorical frames, and poetic voices. This study examines that process using aligned Word2Vec spaces combined with graph-based neighborhood analysis across centuries and major poets. Rather than modeling semantic change as vector displacement alone, it treats lexical history as the rewiring of local semantic graphs: the gain and loss of neighbors, shifts in bridge roles, and movement across communities. The analysis centers on twenty target words, anchored by five recurrent reference terms: Earth, Night, two wine terms, and Heart. Surrounding them are affective, courtly, elemental, and Sufi concepts such as Love, Sorrow, Dervish, King, Annihilation, and Truth. These words exhibit distinct patterns of change. Night is more time-sensitive, Earth more poet-sensitive, and Heart shows continuity despite graph-role mobility. The two wine terms highlight probe sensitivity: one is broad and semantically diffuse, while the other is narrower and more stable. A lexical audit confirms that the corpus contains historically driven terms, poet-specific usages, and sparsely attested mystical vocabulary requiring caution. Overall, semantic change in Persian poetry is better captured as neighborhood rewiring than as abstract drift. For Digital Humanities, this approach restores local structure to computational analysis and supports interpretations closer to literary practice: persistence, migration, mediation, and selective transformation.

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