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How to assess politeness in response to impoliteness: some examples from Latin comedy

  • Federica Iurescia
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Volume II Clause and Discourse
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Volume II Clause and Discourse

Abstract

This chapter aims to contribute to the historical pragmatic research in Latin through a study of conflictual communication in im/politeness perspective. More specifically, it focuses on impolite and overpolite expressions in confrontations, as two different but related linguistic resources displayed in conflict. The corpus used consists of the comedies of Plautus and Terence, and Donatus’ commentaries as source for metapragmatic comments, in order to elucidate ancient evaluation on im/polite phenomena. The results show how power is reflected in speakers’ choices, when they are involved in face-attack interactions.

Abstract

This chapter aims to contribute to the historical pragmatic research in Latin through a study of conflictual communication in im/politeness perspective. More specifically, it focuses on impolite and overpolite expressions in confrontations, as two different but related linguistic resources displayed in conflict. The corpus used consists of the comedies of Plautus and Terence, and Donatus’ commentaries as source for metapragmatic comments, in order to elucidate ancient evaluation on im/polite phenomena. The results show how power is reflected in speakers’ choices, when they are involved in face-attack interactions.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Preface V
  3. Contents VII
  4. Clause
  5. Constructions
  6. Linguistic theory in daily lexicographical practice: dealing with arguments and satellites in the entries of regnare and nectere in the Thesaurus Linguae Latinae 1
  7. The expression of knowledge in Latin: cognosco, nosco, scio, nescio and ignoro 20
  8. Los verbos latinos timeo y metuo: sintaxis, semántica y pragmática 48
  9. Potest + passive infinitives: auxiliary or impersonal verb? 67
  10. Ruinam dare : les complexités d’une construction latine à verbe support 79
  11. On the use of the ablative of the gerund and the nominative of the present participle in Latin technical literature 96
  12. Praedicativum and subject complement: a question revisited in light of the Latin verb sto 116
  13. Der lateinische Dativ: neue Wege in Transitivität und funktionaler Semantik 134
  14. Between syntax and magic: some peculiarities of nominal syntax in Latin curse tablets 155
  15. Les complétives en quoniam : étude à partir du latin biblique 174
  16. Semantics
  17. Animacy in Latin: explaining some peripheral phenomena 199
  18. Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres: Sapir’s typology and different perspectives on totality 219
  19. General extenders in Latin 241
  20. Les parcours sémantiques vers l’adversatif : une approche typologique des langues anciennes 259
  21. The diffraction of iam: contextual effects in interpretation 280
  22. Le système latin de la déixis et de l’endophore : l’évolution linguistique chez Sénèque 296
  23. Discourse
  24. Tense and discourse
  25. On the expression of relative time in Latin narrations 319
  26. Progression thématique et types de séquences chez quelques historiens romains 339
  27. Engaging the audience: an intersubjectivity approach to the historic present tense in Latin 351
  28. ‘I hereby present the use of the Latin first-person perfect indicative as a performative’ 374
  29. Politeness and identity
  30. Expressing happiness as a manifestation of positive politeness in Roman comedy 393
  31. Impoliteness in Plautus’ comedies 413
  32. How to assess politeness in response to impoliteness: some examples from Latin comedy 431
  33. Cicero vs. Mark Antony: identity construction and ingroup/outgroup formation in Philippics One and Three 448
  34. Ego sum Amphitruo: Selbstidentifikation in der römischen Komödie 464
  35. Index 479
Heruntergeladen am 20.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110678222-023/html
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