Detalls del llibre
While historians typically describe the state as emerging through a wide variety of processes and structures such as armies, bureaucracies, and administrative organizations, this book demonstrates that a crucial but unrecognized component of statebuilding in Renaissance Venice was the management of public speech: controlling foul language. Ideas about language were deeply embedded in Venetian political culture. Instead of studying the history of language through literary, printed texts, Horodowich examines the speech of everyday people on the streets of Renaissance Venice by looking at their actual words as recorded in archival documents. By weaving together a variety of historical sources, including literature, statutes, laws, chronicles, trial testimony, and punitive sentences, Horodowich shows that the Venetian state constructed a normative language - a language based not only on grammatical correctness, but on standards of politeness, civility, and piety - to protect and reinforce its civic identity.
Llegir més - Autor/a Elizabeth (New Mexico State University) Horodowich
- ISBN13 9780521178365
- ISBN10 0521178363
- Pàgines 258
- Any Edició 2011
- Fecha de publicación 03/03/2011
- Idioma Alemany, Francès
Ressenyes i valoracions
Language and Statecraft in Early Modern Venice (Alemany, Francès)
- De
- Elizabeth (New Mexico State University) Horodowich
- 9780521178365



