ABSTRACT

In Language in History, Tony Crowley provides the analytical tools for answering such questions. Using a radical re-reading of Saussure and Bahktin, he demonstrates, in four case studies, the ways in which language has been used to construct social and cultural identity in Britain and Ireland. For example, he examines the ways in which language was employed to construct a bourgeois public sphere in 18th Century England, and he reveals how language is still being used in contemporary Ireland to articulate national and political aspirations and why the Irish language died.
By bringing together linguistic and critical theory with his own sharp historical and political consciousness, Tony Crowley provides a new agenda for language study; one which acknowledges the fact that writing about history has always been determined by the historical context, and by issues of race, class and gender. Language in History represents a major contribution to the field, and an essential text for anyone interested in language, discourse and communication.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

Language in history

chapter |45 pages

Chapter 3 Wars of words

The roles of language in eighteenth-century Britain

chapter |48 pages

Chapter 4 Forging the nation

Language and cultural nationalism in nineteenth-century Ireland

chapter |42 pages

Chapter 5 Science and silence

Language, class, and nation in nineteenth-and early twentieth-century Britain

chapter |11 pages

Chapter 6 Conclusion

Back to the past, or on to the future? Language in history