
How to Do Things with Texts
Patterns of Instruction in Religious Discourse 1350-1700
Tanja Rütten(Author)
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 25. March 2011
Book
Hardback
248 pages
978-3-631-61802-8 (ISBN)
Description
The things we do with words are reflected in texts and we do things with texts just as we do things with words. This book sets out to explore how texts function in a given discourse community, and how the functions that texts may have in that particular community can be identified and assessed from a diachronic perspective. It systematically distinguishes general discourse functions (e.g. religious instruction) from more specific text functions (e.g. exegesis, exhortation), and outlines co-occurrence patterns of text functions for selected genres. A contrastive view of the evolution of these profiles ties the changes in individual genres to the complex and dynamic network of which they are a part. Combining corpus methodology with detailed qualitative discussion, this book identifies text functions as the performative centre of texts and shows how language variation and change strongly depend on the dynamics of the complete network of genres in the domain.
More details
Series
Thesis
Doctoral thesis
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Illustrations
num. tables and graphs
Dimensions
Height: 21 cm
Width: 14.8 cm
Weight
440 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-631-61802-8 (9783631618028)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Tanja Rütten is a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Cologne and one of the compilers of the Corpus of English Religious Prose. She graduated in English literature, linguistics, and history from the University of Duisburg and also obtained a teaching degree. In 2010 she received her doctoral degree at the University of Cologne. Her main research interests are historical speech act theory, communication forms in Early English and variational linguistics.
Content
Contents: Discourse functions and text functions - Communication forms of religious instruction in Early English - Functional genre profiles - Text functions: elaboration, transformation and dissolution - Genres as networks - Domain-based approaches to language variation and change.