The Legal Language of Scottish Burghs
Title | The Legal Language of Scottish Burghs PDF eBook |
Author | Joanna Kopaczyk |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 368 |
Release | 2013-08-15 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 0190243317 |
This book offers an innovative, corpus-driven approach to historical legal discourse. It is the first monograph to examine textual standardization patterns in legal and administrative texts on the basis of lexical bundles, drawing on a comprehensive corpus of medieval and early modern legal texts. The book's focus is on legal language in Scotland, where law--with its own nomenclature and its own repertoire of discourse features--was shaped and marked by the concomitant standardizing of the vernacular language, Scots, a sister language to the English of the day. Joanna Kopaczyk's study is based on a unique combination of two methodological frameworks: a rigorous corpus-driven data analysis and a pragmaphilological, context-sensitive qualitative interpretation of the findings. Providing the reader with a rich socio-historical background of legal discourse in medieval and early modern Scottish burghs, Kopaczyk traces the links between orality, community, and law, which are reflected in discourse features and linguistic standardization of legal and administrative texts. In this context, the book also revisits important ingredients of legal language, such as binomials or performatives. Kopaczyk's study is grounded in the functional approach to language and pays particular attention to referential, interpersonal, and textual functions of lexical bundles in the texts. It also establishes a connection between the structure and function of the recurrent patterns, and paves the way for the employment of new methodologies in historical discourse analysis.
The Legal Language of Scottish Burghs
Title | The Legal Language of Scottish Burghs PDF eBook |
Author | Joanna Kopaczyk |
Publisher | Oxford University Press, USA |
Pages | 356 |
Release | 2013-09-12 |
Genre | Foreign Language Study |
ISBN | 0199945152 |
The first monograph to examine textual standardization patterns in legal and administrative texts on the basis of lexical bundles, drawing from a comprehensive corpus of medieval and early modern legal texts
The Multilingual Origins of Standard English
Title | The Multilingual Origins of Standard English PDF eBook |
Author | Laura Wright |
Publisher | Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG |
Pages | 545 |
Release | 2020-09-07 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 3110687542 |
Textbooks inform readers that the precursor of Standard English was supposedly an East or Central Midlands variety which became adopted in London; that monolingual fifteenth century English manuscripts fall into internally-cohesive Types; and that the fourth Type, dating after 1435 and labelled ‘Chancery Standard’, provided the mechanism by which this supposedly Midlands variety spread out from London. This set of explanations is challenged by taking a multilingual perspective, examining Anglo-Norman French, Medieval Latin and mixed-language contexts as well as monolingual English ones. By analysing local and legal documents, mercantile accounts, personal letters and journals, medical and religious prose, multiply-copied works, and the output of individual scribes, standardisation is shown to have been preceded by supralocalisation rather than imposed top-down as a single entity by governmental authority. Linguistic features examined include syntax, morphology, vocabulary, spelling, letter-graphs, abbreviations and suspensions, social context and discourse norms, pragmatics, registers, text-types, communities of practice social networks, and the multilingual backdrop, which was influenced by shifting socioeconomic trends.
Cultures of Law in Urban Northern Europe
Title | Cultures of Law in Urban Northern Europe PDF eBook |
Author | Jackson W. Armstrong |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 288 |
Release | 2020-11-25 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0429553455 |
Drawing together an international team of historians, lawyers and historical sociolinguists, this volume investigates urban cultures of law in Scotland, with a special focus on Aberdeen and its rich civic archive, the Low Countries, Norway, Germany and Poland from c. 1350 to c. 1650. In these essays, the contributors seek to understand how law works in its cultural and social contexts by focusing specifically on the urban experience and, to a great extent, on urban records. The contributions are concerned with understanding late medieval and early modern legal experts as well as the users of courts and legal services, the languages and records of law, and legal activities occurring inside and outside of official legal fora. This volume considers what the expectations of people at different status levels were for the use of the law, what perceptions of justice and authority existed among different groups, and what their knowledge was of law and legal procedure. By examining how different aspects of legal culture came to be recorded in writing, the contributors reveal how that writing itself then became part of a culture of law. Cultures of Law in Urban Northern Europe: Scotland and its Neighbours c.1350–c.1650 combines the historical study of law, towns, language and politics in a way that will be accessible and compelling for advanced level undergraduates and postgraduate to postdoctoral researchers and academics in medieval and early modern, urban, legal, political and linguistic history.
Message and Medium
Title | Message and Medium PDF eBook |
Author | Caroline Tagg |
Publisher | Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG |
Pages | 398 |
Release | 2020-06-08 |
Genre | Language Arts & Disciplines |
ISBN | 3110670836 |
Studies of digital communication technologies often focus on the apparently unique set of multimodal resources afforded to users and the development of innovative linguistic strategies for performing mediatised identities and maintaining online social networks. This edited volume interrogates the novelty of such practices by establishing a transhistorical approach to the study of digital communication. The transhistorical approach explores language practices as lived experiences grounded in historical contexts, and aims to identify those elements of human behaviour that transcend historical boundaries, looking beyond specific developments in communication technologies to understand the enduring motivations and social concerns that drive human communication. The volume reveals long-term patterns in the indexical functions of seemingly innovative written and multimodal resources and the ideologies that underpin them, and shows that methods are not necessarily contingent on their datasets: historical analytic frameworks can be applied to digital data and newer approaches used to understand historical data. These insights present exciting opportunities for English language researchers, both historical and modern.
The Scottish Law Reporter
Title | The Scottish Law Reporter PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 764 |
Release | 1874 |
Genre | Law reports, digests, etc |
ISBN |
The Scottish Law Review and Sheriff Court Reports
Title | The Scottish Law Review and Sheriff Court Reports PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 746 |
Release | 1892 |
Genre | Land tenure |
ISBN |
Vols. 29-47, 1913-1931 and v. 72-79, 1956-1963 include Scottish Land Court reports, v. 1-19 and v. 44-51.