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This volume contains a selection of the papers presented at the
Conference on Historical News Discourse (Chined) that was held in
Florence (Italy) on 2-3 September 2004. The aim of the Conference
was to provide a forum for the presentation and discussion of
recent research in the field of news discourse in early modern
Britain. The first section of the volume focuses on news discourse
in serial publications while the second part examines aspects of
news language in non-serial works. Contributions include synchronic
and diachronic analyses of reportage, polemic, propaganda, review
journalism and advertisements in a wide range of texts including
newsletters, pamphlets and newspapers. Each section is structured
chronologically so that the reader can appreciate aspects of the
general historical development of news discourse. The variety of
topics and methodologies reflects some of the most interesting
research being carried out in the field.
This volume examines the determining role of context in the
production and reception of news texts from the seventeenth century
until the first half of the twentieth century. The context is
understood as historical, social, political, professional, textual
and material, with chapters focusing on how such a context or
contexts influenced the language and reception of the news texts in
question. The contributors to the volume are experts in their field
of research and have employed a variety of methodological
approaches in their analyses of the interrelationship between
context and historical news discourse. These include historical
pragmatics, historical discourse analysis, critical discourse
analysis, appraisal theory, frame theory, and corpus linguistics.
The volume is divided into three sections: British News Contexts,
International News Contexts, and Advertising Contexts. The first
two sections offer a wide-ranging examination of how context has
determined the writing and understanding of news in both the
British and international domain. The third section in the volume
on advertising contexts and discourse is not just justified by the
fundamental importance of advertising in the development and
history of the press but also by the social and political relevance
of the topics examined in the advertisements. These include studies
on mental health and asylum advertisements, runaway slaves
classified advertisements, and embedded nationalistic content and
ideology in Irish newspaper advertisements of the 1930s.
Consisting of twenty-eight chapters and numerous case studies the
volume examines the history of the British and Irish press from its
seventeenth-century beginnings up until the end of the eighteenth
century. Five core chapters regard the Business of the Press
(including advertising), Production and Distribution, Legal
Constraints and Opportunities, Readers and Readerships, and the
Emerging Identities and Communities of news writers and
journalists. Other contributions focus on particular national
realities such as those in Ireland, Scotland and Wales. The
contributions examine features relating to the production,
transmission and reception of not just news publications but also
the more specialised press such as periodical essays, women's
periodicals, literary and review journalism, medical journals, and
the criminal and religious press. As much early modern news was a
transnational phenomenon the volume includes studies on European
and trans-Atlantic networks as well as the role of translation in
news transmission and output.
This volume examines a fundamental concept of language within a
historical perspective. The concept is that of public and private
communication, the historical period ranges from the late middle
ages to the late modern, and the language is English. In short,
what are the linguistic traits, discursive practices, communicative
settings and intentions which identify and contrast public from
private communication, supposing it is possible to make such a fine
distinction?The volume contains contributions from top
international scholars working in the fields of, for example,
historical correspondence, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century
print news, sixteenth-century liturgy and political discourse, the
language of quack doctors, late modern travel writing, personal
notebooks, and even the eighteenth-century public discourse of
shopping.As this ground-breaking volume is not just about key
concepts in the history of the English language, but also examines
at a more general level the concept of private and public
communication, the various chapters will interest scholars working
in language and communication generally as well as English
historical discourse.
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