Article published In: Historical Sociopragmatics
Edited by Jonathan Culpeper
[Journal of Historical Pragmatics 10:2] 2009
► pp. 260–285
Variation and change in patterns of self-reference in early English correspondence
Published online: 24 March 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.10.2.06pal
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.10.2.06pal
The pronoun I indexes the speaker or writer in place and time but also situates him or her in the moral order as the person responsible for what is uttered (Mühlhäusler and Harré 1990). Consequently, this paper asks (1) what gentlemen of the Early and Late Modern England could say about themselves in the first person and (2) whether there were any register or diachronic differences in typical self-reference. This study relies on integrationist social theory and employs a set of quantitative and qualitative methods in the analysis of recurrent word clusters extracted from the Corpus of Early English Correspondence and its Extension. The results point to increasing self-reference and the prominence of mental verb clusters that often serve interpersonal functions.
Cited by (7)
Cited by seven other publications
Bös, Birte
2024. Self- and other-positioning in eighteenth‑century newspapers. In Self- and Other-Reference in Social Contexts [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 342], ► pp. 89 ff.
Wang, Yikang & Xinren Chen
Ávila-Ledesma, Nancy E.
Constantinescu, Mihaela-Viorica
2018. A perspective on “impoliteness” in early modern Romanian court and diplomatic interactions. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 19:1 ► pp. 92 ff.
Kiełkiewicz‐Janowiak, Agnieszka
Palander-Collin, Minna
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