Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Shakespeare and his contemporaries: Designing a genre classification scheme for Early English Books Online 1560–1640 Cover

Shakespeare and his contemporaries: Designing a genre classification scheme for Early English Books Online 1560–1640

By: Sean Murphy  
Open Access
|Apr 2019

References

  1. Austin, John. 1962. How to do things with words. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  2. Bate, Jonathan. 1994. Shakespeare and Ovid. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198183242.001.0001
  3. Bergs, Alexander. 2004. Letters: A new approach to text typology. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 5(2): 207–227.10.1075/jhp.5.2.04ber
  4. Biber, Douglas and Bethany Gray. 2013. Being specific about historical change: The influence of sub-register. Journal of English Linguistics 41(2): 104–134.10.1177/0075424212472509
  5. Biber, Douglas. 1988. Variation across speech and writing. Cambridge: Cam-bridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511621024
  6. Carroll, Ruth, Matti Peikola, Hanna Salmi, Mari-Liisa Varila, Janne Skaffari and Risto Hiltunen. 2013. Pragmatics on the page. European Journal of English Studies 17(1): 54–71.10.1080/13825577.2013.755006
  7. Claridge, Claudia and Andrew Wilson. 2002. Style evolution in the English sermon. In T. Fanego, B. Méndez-Naya and E. Seoane (eds.). Sounds, words, texts and change: Selected papers from 11 ICEHL, 25–44. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.10.1075/cilt.224.05cla
  8. Condren, Conal. 2016. The language of politics in seventeenth-century England. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  9. CoRD | Helsinki Corpus (HC). 1991. Helsinki.fi. http://www.helsinki.fi/varieng/CoRD/corpora/HelsinkiCorpus/textcategories.html,
  10. Crystal, David. 2018. Shakespeare’s words.https://www.shakespeareswords.com,
  11. Crystal, David. 2012. Think on my words: Exploring Shakespeare’s language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9781139196994
  12. Culpeper, Jonathan and Merja Kytö. 2010. Early Modern English dialogues: Spoken interaction as writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  13. Culpeper, Jonathan. 2017. The influence of Italian manners on politeness in England, 1550–1620. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 18(2): 195–213.10.1075/jhp.00002.cul
  14. De Grazia, Margreta. 1980. The secularization of language in the seventeenth century. Journal of the History of Ideas 41(2): 319–329.10.2307/2709464
  15. De Montaigne, Michel. 1802. Essais. (Vol. 2: 10). Didot. (Original work published 1580).
  16. Fanego Teresa, Paula Rodríguez-Puente, María José López-Couso, Belén Méndez-Naya, Paloma Núñez-Pertejo, Cristina Blanco-García and Iván Tamaredo. 2017. The Corpus of Historical English Law Reports 1535–1999 (CHELAR): A resource for analysing the development of English legal discourse. ICAME Journal 41(1): 53–82.10.1515/icame-2017-0003
  17. Fowler, Alastair. 1982. Kinds of literature: An introduction to the theory of genres and modes. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  18. Gotti, Maurizio. 2001. The experimental essay in Early Modern English. European Journal of English Studies 5(2): 221–239.10.1076/ejes.5.2.221.7307
  19. Greenblatt, Stephen J. 1973. Sidney’s ‘Arcadia’ and the mixed mode. Studies in Philology 70(3): 269–278.
  20. Hardie, Andrew. 2012. CQPweb – combining power, flexibility and usability in a corpus analysis tool. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 17 (3): 380–409.10.1075/ijcl.17.3.04har
  21. Hope, Jonathan. 2014. Shakespeare and language: Reason, eloquence and artifice in the Renaissance. London: Bloomsbury.
  22. Hünig, Wolfgang K. 2003. Style labels in monolingual learner’s dictionaries. In G. Radden, H. Cuyckens, R. Dirven and K. Panther (eds.). Motivation in language: Studies in honor of Günter Radden, 367–390. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.10.1075/cilt.243.23hun
  23. Johnson, Keith. 2014. Shakespeare’s English: A practical linguistic guide. Harlow: Pearson.10.4324/9781315833033
  24. Johnson, Keith. 2019. Shakespeare’s language: Perspectives past and present. London: Routledge.10.4324/9781315303079
  25. Jorgensen, Paul A. 1954. Much ado about nothing. Shakespeare Quarterly 5(3): 287–295.10.2307/2866334
  26. Kytö, Merja. 1996 [1991]. 3rd edition. Manual to the diachronic part of the Helsinki Corpus of English Texts: Coding conventions and lists of source texts. Helsinki: Department of English, University of Helsinki.
  27. Kytö, Merja and Erik Smitterberg. 2015. English genres in diachronic corpus linguistics. In P. Shaw, B. Erman, G. Melchers and P. Sundkvist. (eds.). From clerks to corpora: Essays on the English language yesterday and today, 117–133. Stockholm: Stockholm University Press.10.16993/bab.g
  28. Lee, David Y.W. 2001. Genres, registers, text types, domain and styles: Clarifying the concepts and navigating a path through the BNC jungle. Language Learning & Technology: A Refereed Journal for Second and Foreign Language Educators 5(3): 37–72.
  29. McClain, Lisa. 2007. “They have taken away my Lord”: Mary Magdalene, Christ’s missing body, and the mass in Reformation England. The Sixteenth Century Journal 38(1): 77–96.10.1086/SCJ20478246
  30. Meurman-Solin, Anneli. 2001. Genre as a variable in sociohistorical linguistics. European Journal of English Studies 5(2): 241–256.10.1076/ejes.5.2.241.7311
  31. Miller, Henry K. 1956. The paradoxical encomium with special reference to its vogue in England, 1600–1800. Modern Philology 53(3): 145–178.10.1086/389096
  32. Orr, Leah. 2011. Genre labels on the title pages of English fiction, 1660–1800. Philological Quarterly 90(1): 65–95.
  33. Raber, Karen. 2016. Fluid mechanics: Shakespeare’s subversive liquors. In D.B. Goldstein, and A.L. Tigner (eds.). Culinary Shakespeare: Staging food and drink in early modern England, 75–96. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press.10.5325/j.ctv2321hsg.7
  34. Ravassat, Mireille and Jonathan Culpeper (eds.). 2011. Stylistics and Shakespeare: Transdisciplinary approaches. London: Continuum,
  35. Schmied, Josef and Claudia Claridge. 1997. Classifying text- or genre-variation in the Lampeter Corpus of Early Modern English Texts’. In R. Hickey, M. Kytö, I. Lancashire and M. Rissanen (ed.). Tracing the trail of time: Proceedings from the Second Diachronic Corpora Workshop, 119–136. Amsterdam: Rodopi.10.1163/9789004653627_011
  36. Shapiro, James. 2011. 1599: A year in the life of William Shakespeare. London: Faber & Faber.
  37. Slaughter, Mary M. 1982. Universal languages and scientific taxonomy in the seventeenth century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  38. Smith, Winnie. 2017. Documenting categories in EEBO-TCP data [Blog post: May]. https://www.linguisticdna.org.
  39. Steen, Gerard. 1999. Genres of discourse and the definition of literature. Discourse Processes 28(2): 109–120.10.1080/01638539909545075
  40. Sullivan, Ceri. 2007. Disposable elements? Indications of genre in early modern titles. The Modern Language Review 102(3): 641–653.10.2307/20467425
  41. Swales, John. 1990. Genre analysis: English in academic and research settings. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  42. Taavitsainen, Irma. 2001a. Changing conventions of writing: The dynamics of genres, text types, and text traditions. European Journal of English Studies 5(2): 139–150.10.1076/ejes.5.2.139.7309
  43. Taavitsainen, Irma. 2001b. Middle English recipes: Genre characteristics, text type features and underlying traditions of writing. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 2(1): 85–113.10.1075/jhp.2.1.05taa
  44. Taavitsainen, Irma. 2017. The essay in Early Modern and Late Modern English medical writing. Recherches anglaises et nord américaines (RANAM) 50: 15–30.10.3406/ranam.2017.1545
  45. Taylor, Gary, John Jowett, Terri Bourus and Gabriel Egan. 2017. The new Oxford Shakespeare: Critical reference edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/actrade/9780198759560.book.1
  46. Toolan, Michael. 2008. Narrative progression in the short story: First steps in a corpus stylistic approach. Narrative 16(2): 105–120.10.1353/nar.0.0000
  47. Woodbridge, Linda. 2003. Jest books, the literature of roguery, and the vagrant poor in Renaissance England. English Literary Renaissance 33: 201–210.10.1111/1475-6757.00025
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/icame-2019-0003 | Journal eISSN: 1502-5462 | Journal ISSN: 0801-5775
Language: English
Page range: 59 - 82
Published on: Apr 7, 2019
Published by: The International Computer Archive of Modern and Medieval English
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2019 Sean Murphy, published by The International Computer Archive of Modern and Medieval English
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.