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Etymology and the Invention of English in Early Modern Literature (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,510
Discovery Miles 25 100
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Etymology and the Invention of English in Early Modern Literature (Hardcover, New)
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Total price: R2,520
Discovery Miles: 25 200
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How did authors such as Jonson, Spenser, Donne and Milton think
about the past lives of the words they used? Hannah Crawforth shows
how early modern writers were acutely attuned to the religious and
political implications of the etymology of English words. She
argues that these lexically astute writers actively engaged with
the lexicographers, Anglo-Saxonists and etymologists who were
carrying out a national project to recover, or invent, the origins
of English, at a time when the question of a national vernacular
was inseparable from that of national identity. English words are
deployed to particular effect - as a polemical weapon, allegorical
device, coded form of communication, type of historical allusion or
political tool. Drawing together early modern literature and
linguistics, Crawforth argues that the history of English as it was
studied in the period radically underpins the writing of its
greatest poets.
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