John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2018. — 268 p. — (Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 343).
The chapters collected in this volume examine how the sociohistorical and cultural context may influence structural features of lexis and text types. Each paper pays particular attention to social ‘labels’ and attitudes (conservative, religious, ideological, endearing, or other), thereby focusing on their dynamic and historical dimension. Changes in these are analyzed in order to explain morphological, lexical, and textual changes that would otherwise be hard to account for. Together, they provide a varied window on the effect of historical versions of a dynamic society on lexis and text. Examining lexical and textual change in history from a sociocultural perspective teaches us a great deal – not just about the past, but it also makes us think about similar phenomena in the present, enhancing our knowledge about how universally human some of these phenomena are. This volume will be of great interest to (English) historical linguists, sociolinguists, and scholars of sociohistorical and cultural studies.
Conspicuous Lexical Choice in Past SocietiesOld English ead in Anglo-Saxon given names: A comparative approach to Anglo-Saxon anthroponomy - Olga Khallieva Boiché
News and relations : Highlighted textual labels in the titles of early modern news pamphlets - Carla Suhr
“… all spirits, and are melted into air, into thin air”: Metaphorical connections in the history of English - Marc Alexander and Christian Kay
Historical Layers in Text and GenreConservatism and innovation in Anglo-Saxon scribal practice - Christine Wallis
Old English wills: A genre study - Lilo Moessner
Spatio-temporal systems in Chaucer - Minako Nakayasu
“A riddle to myself I am”: Argument shifting in English congregational song between 1500 and 1900 - Kirsten Gather
Lexis, Morphology, and a Changing SocietyCommon to the North of England and to New England : British English regionalisms in John Russell Bartlett’s Dictionary of Americanisms - Javier Ruano-García
Betwixt, amongst, and amidst : The diachronic development of function words with final /st/ - Ryuichi Hotta
English word clipping in a diachronic perspective - Donka Minkova