In:Manners, Norms and Transgressions in the History of English: Literary and linguistic approaches
Edited by Andreas H. Jucker and Irma Taavitsainen
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 312] 2020
► pp. v–vi
Get fulltext
This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 11 August 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.312.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.312.toc
Table of contents
PrefaceVII
Manners, norms and transgressions: Introduction1
Irma Taavitsainen
Andreas H. Jucker
Ipomedon and the elusive nature of blunders in the courtly
literature of medieval England25
Tatjana Silec-Plessis
Unrestrained acting and norms of behaviour: Excess and instruction in The Legend of Good Women
51
Laura Pereira Domínguez
Blunders and (un)intentional offence in Shakespeare75
Urszula Kizelbach
The discourse of manners and politeness in Restoration and eighteenth-century
drama101
Andreas H. Jucker
“This Demon Anger”: Politeness conversation and control in eighteenth-century conduct books
for young women121
Erzsi Kukorelly
A medical debate of “heated pamphleteering” in the early
eighteenth-century141
Irma Taavitsainen
Transgressions as a socialisation strategy in Samuel Richardson’s The
Apprentice’s Vade Mecum (1734)165
Polina Shvanyukova
Variations from letter-writing manuals:
Humble petitions signed by women in Late Modern
London183
Nuria Calvo Cortés
Impoliteness in Blunderland: Carroll’s Alice books and the manners in which manners fail213
Isabel Ermida
“Collect a thousand loyalty points and you get a free coffin”: Creative impoliteness in the TV comedy drama Doc
Martin247
Steve Buckledee
“Meaning you have been known to act rashly”: How Molly Weasley negotiates her identity as a moral authority in
conflicts in the Harry Potter series271
Jana Pelclová
Name index295
Subject index297
