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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Speech Acts in the History of English

Edited by Andreas H. Jucker and Irma Taavitsainen
University of Zurich / University of Helsinki

2008. viii, 318 pp.
Publishing status: Available

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978 90 272 5420 7 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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978 90 272 9141 7 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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Did earlier speakers of English use the same speech acts that we use today? Did they use them in the same way? How did they signal speech act values and how did they negotiate them in case of uncertainty? These are some of the questions that are addressed in this volume in innovative case studies that cover a wide range of speech acts from Old English to Present-day English. All the studies offer careful discussions of methodological and theoretical issues as well as detailed descriptions of specific speech acts. The first part of the volume is devoted to directives and commissives, i.e. speech acts such as requests, commands and promises. The second part is devoted to expressives and assertives and deals with speech acts such as greetings, compliments and apologies. The third part, finally, contains technical reports that deal primarily with the problem of extracting speech acts from historical corpora.


Table of contents

Preface
Speech acts now and then: Towards a pragmatic history of English
Irma Taavitsainen and Andreas H. Jucker
Part I. Directives and commissives
Directives in Old English: Beyond politeness?
Thomas Kohnen
Requests and directness in Early Modern English trial proceedings and play-texts, 1640-1760
Jonathan Culpeper and Dawn Archer
An inventory of directives in Shakespeare's King Lear
Ulrich Busse
Two polite speech acts from a diachronic perspective: Aspects of the realisation of requesting and undertaking commitments in the nineteenth-century commercial community
Gabriella Del Lungo Camiciotti
"No botmeles bihestes": Various ways of making binding promises in Middle English
Mari Pakkala-Weckström
Part II: Expressives and assertives
Hāl, Hail, Hello, Hi: Greetings in English language history
Joachim Grzega
"Methinks you seem more beautiful than ever": Compliments and gender in the history of English
Irma Taavitsainen and Andreas H. Jucker
Apologies in the history of English: Routinized and lexicalized expressions of responsibility and regret
Andreas H. Jucker and Irma Taavitsainen
Part III: Methods of speech act retrieval
Showing a little promise: Identifying and retrieving explicit illocutionary acts from a corpus of written prose
Petteri Valkonen
Fishing for compliments: Precision and recall in corpus-linguistic compliment research
Andreas H. Jucker, Gerold Schneider, Irma Taavitsainen and Barb Breustedt
Tracing directives through text and time: Towards a methodology of corpus-based diachronic speech-act analysis
Thomas Kohnen
Index


This is an excellent collection of papers in the field of diachronic speech act analysis that would appeal to anyone interested in the history of English, historical pragmatics, corpus linguistics, and the philosophy of language. All of the papers, which focus on intriguing problems and challenges in the field, are clearly written, and the authors carefully describe their goals and methodologies, and offer fascinating examples of speech acts they collected for their data. Their analyses of the data and the results are thorough and thoughtful. An additional strength of this book is that the introduction and each paper discuss earlier research in pragmatics and include extensive bibliographies for further exploration.
Julie Winter, on Linguist List, Vol. 19.1622 (2008)