Chapter 1. Enregistering the North
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Joan C. Beal
Abstract
William Bullein’s Dialogue Against the Fever Pestilence (1st ed. 1564) was reprinted by the Early English Text Society in 1888 and later included in Early English Books Online (EEBO). Although much of the scholarly interest in the text has been in the areas of medical history (e.g. Mitchell 1959) and Early Modern English literature (e.g. Griffiths 2007), it has recently caught the attention of scholars interested in dialects of Early Modern English (Taavitsainen, Melchers and Pahti (eds.) 1999; Wales 2006; Ruano Garcia 2010). However, the history of Bullein’s Dialogue as a source of dialect material goes back to the time of the EETS reprint: it was included in R. O. Heslop’s (1896) bibliographical list of works illustrative of the dialect of Northumberland and Heslop used it as a source for some of the entries in his Northumberland Words (1892–4). Since Heslop’s glossary has, in its turn been widely cited as an authoritative source for information on traditional Northumbrian dialects, the influence of Bullein’s Dialogue has been considerable. In this paper, I discuss Bullein’s use of Northumbrian dialect within the framework of indexicality and enregisterment (Agha 2003). I argue that Bullein, who had had contact with speakers of Northumbrian dialect whilst practising as a physician in Tynemouth, chose to portray the character of Mendicus by referencing features that already indexed Northern stereotypes due to their association with the Border Ballads. In doing this, Bullein both drew on and contributed to the enregisterment of Northern, and, more specifically, Northumbrian dialect as ‘outlandish'.
Abstract
William Bullein’s Dialogue Against the Fever Pestilence (1st ed. 1564) was reprinted by the Early English Text Society in 1888 and later included in Early English Books Online (EEBO). Although much of the scholarly interest in the text has been in the areas of medical history (e.g. Mitchell 1959) and Early Modern English literature (e.g. Griffiths 2007), it has recently caught the attention of scholars interested in dialects of Early Modern English (Taavitsainen, Melchers and Pahti (eds.) 1999; Wales 2006; Ruano Garcia 2010). However, the history of Bullein’s Dialogue as a source of dialect material goes back to the time of the EETS reprint: it was included in R. O. Heslop’s (1896) bibliographical list of works illustrative of the dialect of Northumberland and Heslop used it as a source for some of the entries in his Northumberland Words (1892–4). Since Heslop’s glossary has, in its turn been widely cited as an authoritative source for information on traditional Northumbrian dialects, the influence of Bullein’s Dialogue has been considerable. In this paper, I discuss Bullein’s use of Northumbrian dialect within the framework of indexicality and enregisterment (Agha 2003). I argue that Bullein, who had had contact with speakers of Northumbrian dialect whilst practising as a physician in Tynemouth, chose to portray the character of Mendicus by referencing features that already indexed Northern stereotypes due to their association with the Border Ballads. In doing this, Bullein both drew on and contributed to the enregisterment of Northern, and, more specifically, Northumbrian dialect as ‘outlandish'.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
- Chapter 1. Enregistering the North 13
- Chapter 2. The origin and development of the iffy-an(d) conjunction 31
- Chapter 3. From ornament to armament 49
- Chapter 4. Borrowing and copy 71
- Chapter 5. Decoding the parentheses in Shakespeare’s Coriolanus 87
- Chapter 6. The first person in fiction of the 1790s 111
- Chapter 7. “Worth a moment’s notice” 129
- Chapter 8. Jane Austen and the prescriptivists 151
- Chapter 9. Dismantling narrative modes 171
- Chapter 10. Stylistics and “He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven” by W.B. Yeats 195
- Index 213
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
- Chapter 1. Enregistering the North 13
- Chapter 2. The origin and development of the iffy-an(d) conjunction 31
- Chapter 3. From ornament to armament 49
- Chapter 4. Borrowing and copy 71
- Chapter 5. Decoding the parentheses in Shakespeare’s Coriolanus 87
- Chapter 6. The first person in fiction of the 1790s 111
- Chapter 7. “Worth a moment’s notice” 129
- Chapter 8. Jane Austen and the prescriptivists 151
- Chapter 9. Dismantling narrative modes 171
- Chapter 10. Stylistics and “He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven” by W.B. Yeats 195
- Index 213