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The fourteen essays presented here discuss the development of
English during the Middle English period: how the language
developed from Old English, linguistic innovations, and the loss
and abandonment of certain words and constructions. A common theme
is variation and variability - dialectal, social, temporal,
stylistic and idiolectal - with much work fitting under the heading
of historical pragmatics. Some of the essays also shed light on
everyday life, customs, culture and religious practices during the
period. Collectively, the essays make it clear that searchable
computerized corpora have become indispensible tools of the
discipline, with several contributors describing new corpora
created to their own specifications.
Ancrene Wisse introduced through a variety of cultural and critical
approaches which establish the originality and interest of the
treatise. The thirteenth-century Ancrene Wisse is a guide for
female recluses. Addressed to three young sisters of gentle birth,
it teaches what truly good anchoresses should and should not do,
offering in its examples a glimpse of the real life women had in
England in the middle ages. It is also important for its evidence
for the continuation of the Anglo-Saxon tradition of prose writing,
being produced in the West Midlands where Old English writing
conventions continued to develop even after the Norman conquest.
The Companion addresses the cultural and historical background, the
affiliations of the versions, genre, authorship and language; the
various approaches also includea feminist reading of the text.
Contributors: ROGER DAHOOD, RICHARD DANCE, A.S.G. EDWARDS,
CATHERINE INNES-PARKER, BELLA MILLETT, CHRISTINA VON NOLCKEN,
ELIZABETH ROBERTSON, ANNE SAVAGE, D.A. TROTTER, YOKO WADA, NICHOLAS
WATSON.
Ancrene Wisse introduced through a variety of cultural and critical
approaches which establish the originality and interest of the
treatise. The thirteenth-century Ancrene Wisse is a guide for
female recluses. Addressed to three young sisters of gentle birth,
it teaches what truly good anchoresses should and should not do,
offering in its examples a glimpse of the real life women had in
England in the middle ages. It is also important for its evidence
for the continuation of the Anglo-Saxon tradition of prose writing,
being produced in the West Midlands where Old English writing
conventions continued to develop even after the Norman conquest.
The Companion addresses the cultural and historical background, the
affiliations of the versions, genre, authorship and language; the
various approaches also includea feminist reading of the text.
Contributors ROGER DAHOOD, RICHARD DANCE, A.S.G. EDWARDS, CATHERINE
INNES-PARKER, BELLA MILLETT, CHRISTINA VON NOLCKEN, ELIZABETH
ROBERTSON, ANNE SAVAGE, D.A. TROTTER, YOKO WADA, NICHOLAS WATSON.
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