Article published In: Journal of Historical Pragmatics
Vol. 14:1 (2013) ► pp.45–69
1820 Settler petitions in the Cape Colony
Genre dynamics and materiality
Published online: 4 March 2013
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.14.1.02wlo
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.14.1.02wlo
The received view has it that the language of petitions aims at elevating the addressee and demeaning the author. Recent studies into historical (im)politeness interpret it as epistolary facework, i.e. “politic” rather than “polite” behaviour (Bax 2010). Drawing on evidence of the genre dynamics present in nineteenth-century petitions, this paper proposes that for a number of petitioners the conventionalised expression of deference could not have been their main motivation. Through close study of the structural models and their distribution in two collections of petitions related to British settlement in the Cape Colony (1819–1825), the study proposes an account for changes in users’ preferences in this respect. The discussion employs Luckmann’s (e.g. 2009) theory of “communicative genres” and “projects”, which allows one to reach beyond the textual evidence to the dimension of verbal interaction. The paper also focuses on the materiality of historical genres (cf. Barton and Hall 2000).
Keywords: South African English, literacy, communicative genre, petition, politeness
Cited by (8)
Cited by eight other publications
Paternoster, Annick & Susan Fitzmaurice
2019. Politeness in nineteenth-century Europe, a research agenda. In Politeness in Nineteenth-Century Europe [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 299], ► pp. 1 ff.
Faya Cerqueiro, Fátima
Włodarczyk, Matylda & Irma Taavitsainen
Włodarczyk, Matylda
2015. Nineteenth-century institutional (im)politeness. In Transatlantic Perspectives on Late Modern English [Advances in Historical Sociolinguistics, 4], ► pp. 153 ff.
Włodarczyk, Matylda
2017. Auer, Anita, Daniel Schreier and Richard Watts (eds). 2015.Letter Writing and Language Change. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 18:1 ► pp. 142 ff.
Włodarczyk, Matylda
2017. Initiating contact in institutional correspondence. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 18:2 ► pp. 271 ff.
Laitinen, Mikko & Anita Auer
2014. Letters of Artisans and the Labouring Poor (England, c. 1750–1835). In Contact, Variation, and Change in the History of English [Studies in Language Companion Series, 159], ► pp. 187 ff.
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