Shakespeare and Social Dialogue: Dramatic Language and Elizabethan LettersCambridge University Press, 28/03/1999 - 221 páginas Shakespeare and Social Dialogue deals with Shakespeare's language and the rhetoric of Elizabethan letters. Moving beyond claims about the language of individual Shakespearean characters, Magnusson analyses dialogue, conversation, sonnets and particularly letters of the period, which are normally read as historical documents, as the verbal negotiation of specific social and power relations. Thus, the rhetoric of service or friendship is explored in texts as diverse as Sidney family letters, Shakespearean sonnets and Burghley's state letters. The book draws on ideas from discourse analysis and linguistic pragmatics, especially 'politeness theory', relating these to key ideas in epistolary handbooks of the period, including those by Erasmus and Angel Day and demonstrates that Shakespeare's language is rooted in the everyday language of Elizabethan culture. Magnusson creates a way of reading both literary texts and historical documents which bridges the gap between the methods of new historicism and linguistic criticism. |
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Página ix
... positions taken by many of the participants in this social dialogue, but here I wish to acknowledge how much I value the diversity and range of scholarship in this field, how much it has stimulated and taught me. My more personal debts ...
... positions taken by many of the participants in this social dialogue, but here I wish to acknowledge how much I value the diversity and range of scholarship in this field, how much it has stimulated and taught me. My more personal debts ...
Página 1
... position, and relative power in Elizabethan England; how friendship, subjection, authority, intimacy, alienation, enmity and the like were constructed and inflected in words; how the language scripts for early modern relationships might ...
... position, and relative power in Elizabethan England; how friendship, subjection, authority, intimacy, alienation, enmity and the like were constructed and inflected in words; how the language scripts for early modern relationships might ...
Página 3
... position within a graduated hierarchy, and all the while reproducing the forms of symbolic domination and subordination that reinforce the hierarchy. Epistolary handbooks by William Fulwood and John Browne address social groups distinct ...
... position within a graduated hierarchy, and all the while reproducing the forms of symbolic domination and subordination that reinforce the hierarchy. Epistolary handbooks by William Fulwood and John Browne address social groups distinct ...
Página 10
... positions and personal identities, relationships, and systems of knowledge and belief.27 The idea that language is instrumental in creating and maintaining the social order has a long history. For much of that long history, the idea had ...
... positions and personal identities, relationships, and systems of knowledge and belief.27 The idea that language is instrumental in creating and maintaining the social order has a long history. For much of that long history, the idea had ...
Página 11
... positions. By way of the politeness model, the chapter proposes some new ways to understand character construction in language. Given the traditional belle-lettristic convention of the practical criticism of literary language, readers ...
... positions. By way of the politeness model, the chapter proposes some new ways to understand character construction in language. Given the traditional belle-lettristic convention of the practical criticism of literary language, readers ...
Índice
1 | |
15 | |
PART II Eloquent relations in letters | 59 |
PART III A prosaics of conversation | 139 |
Notes | 183 |
Bibliography | 208 |
Index | 217 |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Shakespeare and Social Dialogue: Dramatic Language and Elizabethan Letters Lynne Magnusson Pré-visualização limitada - 1999 |
Shakespeare and Social Dialogue: Dramatic Language and Elizabethan Letters Lynne Magnusson Pré-visualização indisponível - 2006 |
Shakespeare and Social Dialogue: Dramatic Language and Elizabethan Letters Lynne Magnusson Pré-visualização indisponível - 1999 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
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