Entra in un mondo di storie
Storia
How vocabularies once associated with outsiders became objects of fascination in eighteenth-century Britain
While eighteenth-century efforts to standardize the English language have long been studied—from Samuel Johnson's Dictionary to grammar and elocution books of the period—less well-known are the era's popular collections of odd slang, criminal argots, provincial dialects, and nautical jargon. Strange Vernaculars delves into how these published works presented the supposed lexicons of the "common people" and traces the ways that these languages, once shunned and associated with outsiders, became objects of fascination in printed glossaries—from The New Canting Dictionary to Francis Grose's Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue—and in novels, poems, and songs, including works by Daniel Defoe, John Gay, Samuel Richardson, Robert Burns, and others.
Janet Sorensen argues that the recognition and recovery of outsider languages was part of a transition in the eighteenth century from an aristocratic, exclusive body politic to a British national community based on the rhetoric of inclusion and liberty, as well as the revaluing of a common British past. These representations of the vernacular made room for the "common people" within national culture, but only after representing their language as "strange." Such strange and estranged languages, even or especially in their obscurity, came to be claimed as British, making for complex imaginings of the nation and those who composed it. Odd cant languages, witty slang phrases, provincial terms newly valued for their connection to British history, or nautical jargon repurposed for sentimental connections all toggle, in eighteenth-century jest books, novels, and poems, between the alluringly alien and familiarly British.
Shedding new light on the history of the English language, Strange Vernaculars explores how eighteenth-century British literature transformed the patois attributed to those on the margins into living symbols of the nation.
Examples of slang from Strange Vernaculars
bum-boat woman: one who sells bread, cheese, greens, and liquor to sailors from a small boat alongside a ship collar day: execution day crewnting: groaning, like a grunting horse gentleman's companion: lice gingerbread-work: gilded carvings of a ship's bow and stern luggs: ears mort: a large amount thraw: to argue hotly and loudly
© 2017 Princeton University Press (Ebook): 9781400885169
Data di uscita
Ebook: 6 giugno 2017
Più di 400.000 titoli
Kids Mode (accesso sicuro per bambini)
Scarica e ascolta offline
Disdici quando vuoi
Per te che non sei un avido ascoltatore.
1 account
10 ore/mese
Disdici quando vuoi
La scelta migliore per 1 utente. Ascolta e leggi quanto vuoi.
1 account
Ascolto illimitato
Disdici quando vuoi
12 mesi al prezzo di 9. Ascolta e leggi quanto vuoi.
1 account
Ascolto illimitato
Disdici quando vuoi
Storie per tutta la famiglia. Entrate insieme in un mondo di storie.
2 account
Ascolto illimitato
Disdici quando vuoi
Italiano
Italia