In:Exploring Language and Society with Big Data: Parliamentary discourse across time and space
Edited by Minna Korhonen, Haidee Kotze and Jukka Tyrkkö
[Studies in Corpus Linguistics 111] 2023
► pp. 17–53
Chapter 1Speech in the British Hansard
Published online: 13 November 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.111.01ale
https://doi.org/10.1075/scl.111.01ale
Abstract
This chapter provides a detailed textual and linguistic
history of Hansard, the records of debates of the British parliament from
1803 to the present, on which the Hansard Corpus is based. It analyses how
parliamentary speech is recorded and presented across that period, examining
the changes in direct and indirect speech types arising from commercial
factors, pressure from parliament, editorial practice, and the availability
and quality of source material. The chapter concludes with a breakdown, for
each period of Hansard’s history, of what the data for that period does and
does not represent.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.“Tolerably well”: Reporting before Hansard
- 3.Thomas Curson Hansard, Hansard, and the Hansard Corpus
- 4.“Fidelity is the first and indispensable requisite”
- 5.“Bound for the bona fides”: The Hansards and the Parliamentary Debates, 1803–1888
- 6.Hansard without the Hansards: The chaotic Authorised Edition, 1889 to 1908
- 7.‘Something like literary shape’: The Official Report, 1909 to present
- 8.Conclusion: Hansard for eternity, Hansard for linguists
Acknowledgments Notes References
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Cited by (3)
Cited by three other publications
Currie, John S. G.
Hiltunen, Turo & Turo Vartiainen
2024. A corpus-pragmatic analysis of linguistic democratisation in the British Hansard. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 25:2 ► pp. 245 ff.
Alexander, Marc & Andrew Struan
2022. “In barbarous times and in uncivilized countries”. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 27:4 ► pp. 480 ff.
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