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The studies presented in this volume concentrate on aspects of Late
Modern English correspondence in the usage of individuals belonging
to different social classes, writing for different purposes, and
finding themselves in different social contexts, both in Britain
and in its colonies. As the growing body of research published in
recent years has shown, analysing the language of letters presents
both a challenge and an opportunity to obtain access to as full a
range of styles as would be possible for a period for which we only
have access to the language in its written form. It is an area of
study in which all the contributors have considerable expertise,
which affords them to present data findings while discussing
important methodological issues. In addition, in most cases data
derive from specially-designed 'second-generation' corpora,
reflecting state-of-the-art approaches to historical
sociolinguistics and pragmatics. Theoretical issues concerning
letters as a text type, their role in social network analysis, and
their value in the identification of register or variety specific
traits are high-lighted, alongside issues concerning the (often
less than easy) relationship between strictly codified norms and
actual usage on the part of speakers whose level of education could
vary considerably.
This volume reflects the results of a workshop on the investigation
of specialized discourse in a diachronic perspective, held within
the 15th European Symposium on Language for Special Purposes ('New
Trends in Specialized Discourse', Bergamo 2005). The articles deal
with developments from the late medieval period to the present day,
and the book encompasses studies in which the long-established
tradition of domain-specific English is highlighted. The fields of
contributions range from scientific to legal to political and
business discourse. Special attention is given to argumentation, in
an attempt to assess the time-depth of typical rhetorical
strategies. Some methodological innovations are introduced in
corpus linguistics. Numerous contributions bring new materials to
scholarly discussion, as recently released or in-progress
'second-generation' corpora are used as data. Recent changes in
present-day legal and scientific writing are also discussed as they
witness fast adaptation to new requirements, due to the advent and
growing familiarity of new technologies, international law and
changes in academia.
This volume focuses on the nature of official correspondence
produced m the period after 1500, from Early Modern to
nineteenth-century English. The contributions reflect the extent to
which the genre is somewhat plastic in this period, gradually
acquiring distinguishing conventions and protocols as the
situations in which the letters themselves are encoded acquire more
distinctiveness. Although correspondence has long been the object
of diachronic studies, very little seems to be available as far as
specialized usage is concerned, hence the specific interest in
letters exchanged within scientific, diplomatic, and business
networks. In addition, the study of business and official
correspondence offered here profits from a multi-disciplinary and
multi-methodological approach, as it relies on a rich array of
databases and corpora of correspondence, ranging from highly
specialized collections to more broadly constructed diagnostic
corpora, in which correspondence is just one register or text-type.
While specific attention is paid to phenomena relating to the
expression of positive and negative politeness through the
investigation of authentic (rather than constructed) texts,
methodological issues are also taken into consideration.
This volume contains a selection of papers presented at the First
International Conference on English Historical Dialectology
(ICEHD), organized at the University of Bergamo in September 2003.
It includes papers on fundamental aspects of English historical
dialectology, from Old English to Late Modern English. The papers
discuss points in two thematically distinct but related sections,
'Methods' and 'Data'. The volume also includes the transcript of a
debate on methodological issues, in which the main themes are the
principles of historical investigation of geographical varieties,
the new approaches provided by corpus linguistics and computer
technology, and the need for greater awareness of textual
reliability.
This volume includes fifteen papers focussing on three important
aspects of the history of English in Britain and overseas since the
eighteenth century: the grammatical tradition of prescriptivism,
syntactic developments and sociolinguistic factors affecting
language variation. Within these areas, methodological approaches
include those relating to corpus linguistics, social network
theory, the investigation of specialized discourse in a diachronic
perspective, and lexicography. The individual sections are highly
cohesive with each other, as the ideological considerations on
which the perscriptive tradition was founded are underpinned by
sociological factors. Theoretical contributions appear alongside
'case studies' in which instances of specific usage are
investigated.
The papers collected in this volume were first presented at the
14th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics
(Bergamo, 2006). Alongside studies of syntax, morphology, lexis and
semantics, published in two sister volumes, many innovative
contributions focused on geo-historical variation in English. A
carefully peer-reviewed selection, including two plenary lectures,
appears here in print for the first time, bearing witness to the
increasing scholarly interest in varieties of English other than
so-called standard English. In all the contributions,
well-established methods of historical dialectology combine with
new theoretical approaches, in an attempt to shed more light on
phenomena that have hitherto remained unexplored, or have only just
begun to be investigated. Perceptual dialectology is also taken
into consideration, and state-of-the-art tools, such as electronic
corpora and atlases, are employed consistently, ensuring the
methodological homogeneity of the contributions.
This volume presents the results of a research team of the
University of Bergamo, whose aim was the analysis of verbal
modality in the Helsinki corpus. This corpus includes a large
selection of texts compiled in Middle English and Early Modern En
This volume contains a selection of papers presented at an
international conference held in Bergamo (18-20 October 2001),
which focussed on the issues of conflict and negotiation in the
language of specialized texts. The assembled contribut
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