Article published In: Journal of Historical Pragmatics
Vol. 7:1 (2006) ► pp.89–113
The moral panic about bad language in England, 1691–1745
Published online: 12 January 2006
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.7.1.05mce
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhp.7.1.05mce
In this paper I use a corpus of the writings of the Society for the Reformation of Manners to look at the discursive construction of attitudes to bad language in English. Using this corpus of texts as an example of a moral panic about language I use keywords to explore moral panic rhetoric, the formation of spirals of signification and the impact of both on attitudes to bad language in English in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.
Keywords: bad language, convergence, keywords, moral panics, moral reform, spirals of signification
Cited by (7)
Cited by seven other publications
Meier, Henk Erik, Anica Rose & Martin Hölzen
Lukač, Morana
Schirm, Johanna & Henk Erik Meier
Brezina, Vaclav, Tony McEnery & Stephen Wattam
Stone, Teresa Elizabeth, Margaret McMillan & Mike Hazelton
Percy, Carol
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