ABSTRACT

This collection shows students of English and applied linguistics ways in which language and literary study can be integrated. By drawing on a wide range of texts by mainly British and American writers, from a variety of different periods, the contributors show how discourse stylistics can provide models for the systematic description of, for example, dialogue in fiction; language of drama and balladic poetry; speech presentation; the interactive properties of metre; the communicative context of author/reader. Among the texts examined are novels, poetry and drama by major twentieth-century writers such as Joyce, Auden, Pinter and Hopkins, as well as examples from Shakespeare, Donne and Milton.

Each chapter has a wide range of exercises for practical analysis, an extensive glossary and a comprehensive bibliography with suggestions for further reading. The book will be particularly useful to undergraduate students of English and applied linguistics and advanced students of modern languages or English as a foreign language.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 1

chapter 1|18 pages

Changing the Guard at Elsinore

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 2

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 3

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 4

chapter 4|16 pages

Polyphony in Hard Times

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 5

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 6

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 7

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 8

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 9

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 10

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 11

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 12

chapter 12|22 pages

Metre and Discourse

part |2 pages

Introduction to Chapter 13