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‘Ane end of an auld song?’

Macro and Micro Perspectives on Written Scots in Correspondence during the Union of the Parliaments Debates

by Sarah van Eyndhoven (Author)
©2025 Monographs 0 Pages
Series: Historical Sociolinguistics, Volume 8

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Summary

This book examines the relationship between political identity and variation from a diachronic perspective, and how vernacular features could index political and ideological affiliations. Specifically, it explores the use of written Scots in the correspondence of Scottish politicians active during the Union of the Parliaments debates at the turn of the eighteenth century. Drawing from the frameworks of First, Second and Third Wave perspectives on variation, and combining macro-social statistical modelling with microsocial analysis, broad socio-political factors are empirically investigated alongside plausible stylistic intentions in conditioning observed linguistic behaviour. Detailing the process of building a corpus, identifying relevant Scots features, and presenting analyses across time, sociolinguistic factors, and individual recipients, this volume provides the first in-depth quantitative and sociolinguistic examination of early modern Scots and its expanding indexical roles.

Details

Pages
Publication Year
2025
ISBN (Softcover)
9781803745015
Language
English
Keywords
standardisation historical sociolinguistics pluricentric languages pluriareal languages language teaching language norms codification norms of usage Germanic languages Romance languages Slavic languages standard languages
Published
Oxford, Berlin, Bruxelles, Chennai, Lausanne, New York, 2025. xx, 268 pp., 20 fig. col., 2 fig. b/w, 12 tables.
Product Safety
Peter Lang Group AG

Biographical notes

Sarah van Eyndhoven (Author)

Sarah van Eyndhoven is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Canterbury. Her current research examines correspondence from early Scottish immigrants to New Zealand and the role of changing identities in Scots use. Her previous research has examined historical Scots in Older and early Modern periods using statistical methodologies.

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Title: ‘Ane end of an auld song?’