ABSTRACT

This book presents an innovative approach to the language of one of the most popular English authors. It illustrates how corpus linguistic methods can be employed to study electronic versions of texts by Charles Dickens. With particular focus on Dickens’s novels, the book proposes a way into the Dickensian world that starts from linguistic patterns. The analysis begins with clusters, i.e. repeated sequences of words, as pointers to local textual functions. Combining quantitative findings with qualitative analyses, the book takes a fresh view on Dickens’s techniques of characterisation, the literary presentation of body language and speech in fiction. The approach brings together corpus linguistics, literary stylistics and Dickens criticism. It thus contributes to bridging the gap between linguistic and literary studies and will be a useful resource for both researchers and students of English language and literature.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|21 pages

Corpus Stylistics

chapter 3|20 pages

Starting with the Texts

Corpora, Clusters, and Lexical Bundles

chapter 5|25 pages

Character Speech

chapter 6|28 pages

Body Language

chapter 7|24 pages

As if and the Narrator Comment

chapter 8|12 pages

Labels

Contextualising and Highlighting Functions

chapter 9|15 pages

Conclusions and Outlook