Communicating Early English Manuscripts
Herausgeber: Jucker, Andreas H.; Pahta, Päivi
Communicating Early English Manuscripts
Herausgeber: Jucker, Andreas H.; Pahta, Päivi
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The first volume to focus on the communicative aspects of English manuscripts from the fourteenth to the nineteenth century.
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The first volume to focus on the communicative aspects of English manuscripts from the fourteenth to the nineteenth century.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. August 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 457g
- ISBN-13: 9781107646506
- ISBN-10: 1107646502
- Artikelnr.: 41643038
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 314
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. August 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 457g
- ISBN-13: 9781107646506
- ISBN-10: 1107646502
- Artikelnr.: 41643038
Introduction; 1. Communicating manuscripts: authors, scribes, readers,
listeners and communicating characters Andreas H. Jucker and Päivi Pahta;
Part I. Authors, Scribes and their Audiences: 2. Commonplace-book
communication: role shifts and text functions in Robert Reynes's notes
contained in MS Tanner 407 Thomas Kohnen; 3. Textuality in late medieval
England: two case studies Gabriella Del Lungo Camiciotti; 4. The
significance of now-dispersed Bute 13: a mixed-language scientific
manuscript Patricia Deery Kurtz and Linda Ehrsam Voigts; 5. Communicating
attitudes and values through language choices: diatopic and diastratic
variation in Mary Magdalene in MS Digby 133 Maurizio Gotti and Stefania
Maci; 6. Constructing the audiences of the Old Bailey Trials 1674-1834
Elizabeth Closs Traugott; Part II. Communicating through Handwritten
Correspondence: 7. A defiant gentleman or 'the strengest thiefe of Wales':
reinterpreting the politics in a medieval correspondence Merja Stenroos and
Martti Mäkinen; 8. Sociopragmatic aspects of person reference in Nathaniel
Bacon's letters Minna Palander-Collin and Minna Nevala; 9. Poetic
collaboration and competition in the late seventeenth century: George
Stepney's letters to Jacob Tonson and Matthew Prior Susan Fitzmaurice; 10.
Handwritten communication in nineteenth-century business correspondence
Marina Dossena; Part III. From Manuscript to Print: 11. The relationship
between MS Hunter 409 and the 1532 edition of Chaucer's works edited by
William Thynne Graham D. Caie; 12. The development of play-texts: from
manuscript to print Jonathan Culpeper and Jane Demmen; 13. Communicating
Galen's Methodus medendi in Middle and Early Modern English Päivi Pahta,
Turo Hiltunen, Ville Marttila, Maura Ratia, Carla Suhr and Jukka Tyrkkö;
14. Prepositional modifiers in early English medical prose: a study ON
their historical development IN noun phrases Douglas Biber, Bethany Gray,
Alpo Honkapohja and Päivi Pahta; 15. The pragmatics of punctuation in Older
Scots Jeremy Smith and Christian Kay; Part IV. Manuscripts and their
Communicating Characters: 16. Greetings and farewells in Chaucer's
Canterbury Tales Andreas H. Jucker; 17. Attitudes of the accused in the
Salem witchcraft trials Leena Kahlas-Tarkka and Matti Rissanen.
listeners and communicating characters Andreas H. Jucker and Päivi Pahta;
Part I. Authors, Scribes and their Audiences: 2. Commonplace-book
communication: role shifts and text functions in Robert Reynes's notes
contained in MS Tanner 407 Thomas Kohnen; 3. Textuality in late medieval
England: two case studies Gabriella Del Lungo Camiciotti; 4. The
significance of now-dispersed Bute 13: a mixed-language scientific
manuscript Patricia Deery Kurtz and Linda Ehrsam Voigts; 5. Communicating
attitudes and values through language choices: diatopic and diastratic
variation in Mary Magdalene in MS Digby 133 Maurizio Gotti and Stefania
Maci; 6. Constructing the audiences of the Old Bailey Trials 1674-1834
Elizabeth Closs Traugott; Part II. Communicating through Handwritten
Correspondence: 7. A defiant gentleman or 'the strengest thiefe of Wales':
reinterpreting the politics in a medieval correspondence Merja Stenroos and
Martti Mäkinen; 8. Sociopragmatic aspects of person reference in Nathaniel
Bacon's letters Minna Palander-Collin and Minna Nevala; 9. Poetic
collaboration and competition in the late seventeenth century: George
Stepney's letters to Jacob Tonson and Matthew Prior Susan Fitzmaurice; 10.
Handwritten communication in nineteenth-century business correspondence
Marina Dossena; Part III. From Manuscript to Print: 11. The relationship
between MS Hunter 409 and the 1532 edition of Chaucer's works edited by
William Thynne Graham D. Caie; 12. The development of play-texts: from
manuscript to print Jonathan Culpeper and Jane Demmen; 13. Communicating
Galen's Methodus medendi in Middle and Early Modern English Päivi Pahta,
Turo Hiltunen, Ville Marttila, Maura Ratia, Carla Suhr and Jukka Tyrkkö;
14. Prepositional modifiers in early English medical prose: a study ON
their historical development IN noun phrases Douglas Biber, Bethany Gray,
Alpo Honkapohja and Päivi Pahta; 15. The pragmatics of punctuation in Older
Scots Jeremy Smith and Christian Kay; Part IV. Manuscripts and their
Communicating Characters: 16. Greetings and farewells in Chaucer's
Canterbury Tales Andreas H. Jucker; 17. Attitudes of the accused in the
Salem witchcraft trials Leena Kahlas-Tarkka and Matti Rissanen.
Introduction; 1. Communicating manuscripts: authors, scribes, readers,
listeners and communicating characters Andreas H. Jucker and Päivi Pahta;
Part I. Authors, Scribes and their Audiences: 2. Commonplace-book
communication: role shifts and text functions in Robert Reynes's notes
contained in MS Tanner 407 Thomas Kohnen; 3. Textuality in late medieval
England: two case studies Gabriella Del Lungo Camiciotti; 4. The
significance of now-dispersed Bute 13: a mixed-language scientific
manuscript Patricia Deery Kurtz and Linda Ehrsam Voigts; 5. Communicating
attitudes and values through language choices: diatopic and diastratic
variation in Mary Magdalene in MS Digby 133 Maurizio Gotti and Stefania
Maci; 6. Constructing the audiences of the Old Bailey Trials 1674-1834
Elizabeth Closs Traugott; Part II. Communicating through Handwritten
Correspondence: 7. A defiant gentleman or 'the strengest thiefe of Wales':
reinterpreting the politics in a medieval correspondence Merja Stenroos and
Martti Mäkinen; 8. Sociopragmatic aspects of person reference in Nathaniel
Bacon's letters Minna Palander-Collin and Minna Nevala; 9. Poetic
collaboration and competition in the late seventeenth century: George
Stepney's letters to Jacob Tonson and Matthew Prior Susan Fitzmaurice; 10.
Handwritten communication in nineteenth-century business correspondence
Marina Dossena; Part III. From Manuscript to Print: 11. The relationship
between MS Hunter 409 and the 1532 edition of Chaucer's works edited by
William Thynne Graham D. Caie; 12. The development of play-texts: from
manuscript to print Jonathan Culpeper and Jane Demmen; 13. Communicating
Galen's Methodus medendi in Middle and Early Modern English Päivi Pahta,
Turo Hiltunen, Ville Marttila, Maura Ratia, Carla Suhr and Jukka Tyrkkö;
14. Prepositional modifiers in early English medical prose: a study ON
their historical development IN noun phrases Douglas Biber, Bethany Gray,
Alpo Honkapohja and Päivi Pahta; 15. The pragmatics of punctuation in Older
Scots Jeremy Smith and Christian Kay; Part IV. Manuscripts and their
Communicating Characters: 16. Greetings and farewells in Chaucer's
Canterbury Tales Andreas H. Jucker; 17. Attitudes of the accused in the
Salem witchcraft trials Leena Kahlas-Tarkka and Matti Rissanen.
listeners and communicating characters Andreas H. Jucker and Päivi Pahta;
Part I. Authors, Scribes and their Audiences: 2. Commonplace-book
communication: role shifts and text functions in Robert Reynes's notes
contained in MS Tanner 407 Thomas Kohnen; 3. Textuality in late medieval
England: two case studies Gabriella Del Lungo Camiciotti; 4. The
significance of now-dispersed Bute 13: a mixed-language scientific
manuscript Patricia Deery Kurtz and Linda Ehrsam Voigts; 5. Communicating
attitudes and values through language choices: diatopic and diastratic
variation in Mary Magdalene in MS Digby 133 Maurizio Gotti and Stefania
Maci; 6. Constructing the audiences of the Old Bailey Trials 1674-1834
Elizabeth Closs Traugott; Part II. Communicating through Handwritten
Correspondence: 7. A defiant gentleman or 'the strengest thiefe of Wales':
reinterpreting the politics in a medieval correspondence Merja Stenroos and
Martti Mäkinen; 8. Sociopragmatic aspects of person reference in Nathaniel
Bacon's letters Minna Palander-Collin and Minna Nevala; 9. Poetic
collaboration and competition in the late seventeenth century: George
Stepney's letters to Jacob Tonson and Matthew Prior Susan Fitzmaurice; 10.
Handwritten communication in nineteenth-century business correspondence
Marina Dossena; Part III. From Manuscript to Print: 11. The relationship
between MS Hunter 409 and the 1532 edition of Chaucer's works edited by
William Thynne Graham D. Caie; 12. The development of play-texts: from
manuscript to print Jonathan Culpeper and Jane Demmen; 13. Communicating
Galen's Methodus medendi in Middle and Early Modern English Päivi Pahta,
Turo Hiltunen, Ville Marttila, Maura Ratia, Carla Suhr and Jukka Tyrkkö;
14. Prepositional modifiers in early English medical prose: a study ON
their historical development IN noun phrases Douglas Biber, Bethany Gray,
Alpo Honkapohja and Päivi Pahta; 15. The pragmatics of punctuation in Older
Scots Jeremy Smith and Christian Kay; Part IV. Manuscripts and their
Communicating Characters: 16. Greetings and farewells in Chaucer's
Canterbury Tales Andreas H. Jucker; 17. Attitudes of the accused in the
Salem witchcraft trials Leena Kahlas-Tarkka and Matti Rissanen.