Description

Book Synopsis

Renaissance England was marked by a pervasive culture of courtesy. The research hypothesis of this book is that verbal courtesy, for historical and social reasons involving social mobility and the crisis produced by the clash between different systems of thought (Humanism, Catholicism, Protestantism, new scientific discourses), soon became strategic language, characterised by specific forms of facework detectable through the patterns of politeness and impoliteness employed by speakers.

Adopting a historical pragmatic perspective, Using the Devil with Courtesy semantically and conceptually connects courtesy and (im)politeness to analyse Renaissance forms of (im)politeness through Shakespeare. Drawing on a methodological line of research running from Goffman (1967) and Grice (1967), to Brown and Levinson (1987), Jucker (2010) and Culpeper (2011), the book focuses specifically on Hamlet (c. 1601) and The Taming of the Shrew (c. 1594) with three principal aims: 1) to survey the (im)polite strategies used by the characters; 2) to explore how this language connects to a specific Renaissance subjectivity; 3) to link language and subjectivity to extra-textual (historical and semiotic) factors.



Table of Contents

Introduction – Introducing (Im)politeness – (Im)politeness and the Early Modern Period – (Im)polite Strategies in Hamlet – The Gendering of (Im)politeness: The Taming of the Shrew

Using the Devil with Courtesy: Shakespeare and

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A Hardback by Maurizio Gotti, Bianca Del Villano

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    View other formats and editions of Using the Devil with Courtesy: Shakespeare and by Maurizio Gotti

    Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
    Publication Date: 02/10/2018
    ISBN13: 9783034323154, 978-3034323154
    ISBN10: 3034323158

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Renaissance England was marked by a pervasive culture of courtesy. The research hypothesis of this book is that verbal courtesy, for historical and social reasons involving social mobility and the crisis produced by the clash between different systems of thought (Humanism, Catholicism, Protestantism, new scientific discourses), soon became strategic language, characterised by specific forms of facework detectable through the patterns of politeness and impoliteness employed by speakers.

    Adopting a historical pragmatic perspective, Using the Devil with Courtesy semantically and conceptually connects courtesy and (im)politeness to analyse Renaissance forms of (im)politeness through Shakespeare. Drawing on a methodological line of research running from Goffman (1967) and Grice (1967), to Brown and Levinson (1987), Jucker (2010) and Culpeper (2011), the book focuses specifically on Hamlet (c. 1601) and The Taming of the Shrew (c. 1594) with three principal aims: 1) to survey the (im)polite strategies used by the characters; 2) to explore how this language connects to a specific Renaissance subjectivity; 3) to link language and subjectivity to extra-textual (historical and semiotic) factors.



    Table of Contents

    Introduction – Introducing (Im)politeness – (Im)politeness and the Early Modern Period – (Im)polite Strategies in Hamlet – The Gendering of (Im)politeness: The Taming of the Shrew

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