Discourse of Desperation

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A01=Ivor Timmis
AD=20200708
Author_Ivor Timmis
British National Corpus
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=CBX
Category=CFB
Category=CFF
Category=CFG
Category=NL-CB
Category=NL-CF
Category=NL-EB
Charity Schools
Concordance Software
COP=United Kingdom
corpus pragmatics
corpus-based analysis
Dame Schools
Discount=15
early 19th century paupers
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Essex Pauper Letters
Finnish Emigrants
Format=BB
Format_Hardback
Formulaic Language
formulaic language strategies
Formulaic Sequences
Gun Powder
historical socio-pragmatics
historical sociolinguistics
HMM=229
Host Parish
Idiom Principle
IMPN=Routledge
ISBN13=9780367000264
Ivor Timmis
Kind Attention
Language Awareness
language of paupers
Language_English
Letter Corpus
linguistic resources
literacy practices history
Literacy Rates
Mayhew Corpus
Multiple Negation
PA=Not yet available
pauper letter writing strategies
Pauper Letters
PD=20200708
phraseology
Playing Back
Poor Law
POP=London
pragmatic communication research
Price_€100 to €200
PS=Forthcoming
PUB=Taylor & Francis Ltd
SN=Routledge Studies in Linguistics
social stratification language
Standard English
Strategic Impression Management
strategic use of language
Subject=Elt Background & Reference Material
Subject=Language: Reference & General
Subject=Linguistics
Tenacious Sense
Threatening Letters
Vernacular Relativisers
Wider Issues
WMM=152
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367000264
  • Format: Hardback
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Jul 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: London, GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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This book discusses how the poor and desperate in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries mobilised their linguistic resources in pursuit of vital pragmatic goals, drawing on three corpora of letters written by the poor.

The main question addressed by the book is, ‘How were the poor, often armed only with low levels of education and literacy, able to meet the challenge of writing letters vital to their interests, even to their survival?’ Timmis argues that the answer lies in the highly strategic approach adopted by the writers, particularly evident in the way formulaic language is used in the pauper and prisoner letters. Formulaic language supports the writers in producing intelligible letters in what they consider an appropriate tone but also allows them to exploit popular cultural motifs of the time. Data is drawn from three sources: pauper letters by the poor applying for parish relief, from around 1795 to 1834; prisoner letters by women awaiting deportation to Australia for defrauding the Bank of England in the early nineteenth century; and anonymous letters by the poor demanding money with menaces. Comparison with the Mayhew Corpus of interviews with the London poor in the 1850s reinforces the idea that part of the writers’ approach was to orient away from the vernacular towards a style they perceived to be more elevated.

Showing how resourceful people can be in communicating their needs in crises and in turn surfacing new insights into literacy and demotic language awareness, this book will be of interest to students and scholars in corpus linguistics and social history.

Ivor Timmis is Professor of English Language Teaching at Leeds Beckett University, UK. He has a long-standing interest in corpus research, which was the subject of his first book for Routledge, Corpus Linguistics for ELT in 2015. More recently, he has become interested in aspects of historical linguistics, an interest which culminated in Historical Perspectives on Spoken Language Research for Routledge in 2017. This book arose from two historical spoken corpora he developed himself: the Bolton/Worktown Corpus of 1930s of informal spoken English and the Mayhew Corpus of 1850s London vernacular. It was this line of research that led him to the letters which are the focus of this book: letters by paupers, prisoner and rogues, c.1760-1830.

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