1st Edition
Language and Community in Early England Imagining Distance in Medieval Literature
By Emily Butler
Copyright 2017
212 Pages
by
Routledge
212 Pages
by
Routledge
212 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
This book examines the development of English as a written vernacular and identifies that development as a process of community building that occurred in a multilingual context. Moving through the eighth century to the thirteenth century, and finally to the sixteenth-century antiquarians who collected medieval manuscripts, it suggests that this important period in the history of English can only... Read more
Introduction: Community and Distance
Chapter 1: Latinity and the English People
Chapter 2: Crafting a Textual Kingdom in Wessex
Chapter 3: Preaching and Politics in a Time of Conquest
Chapter 4: Old and Newer English in the West Midlands
Chapter 5: Shewing the Auncient Fayth: An Elizabethan Sequel
Conclusion
Biography
Emily Butler, Assistant Professor of English at John Carroll University, USA, is an Anglo-Saxonist working on attitudes to language and how such attitudes shape textual communities and impinge on textual production. Recent work includes articles and papers on the Old English Prose Psalms, Matthew Parker's medieval collection, and the Encomium Emmae Reginae.






