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Early Modern English News Discourse : Newspapers, Pamphlets and Scientific News Discourse / edited by Andreas H. Jucker

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, ©2009.Description: vi, 227p. hbkISBN:
  • 9789027254320
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 072.22 JucE
Summary: In Early Modern Britain, new publication channels were developed and new textual genres established themselves. News discourse became increasingly more important and reached wider audiences, with pamphlets as the first real mass media. Newspapers appeared, first on a weekly and then on a daily basis. And scientific news discourse in the form of letters exchanged between fellow scholars turned into academic journals. The papers in this volume provide state-of-the art analyses of these developments. The first part of the volume contains studies of early newspapers that range from reports of crime and punishment to want ads, and from traces of religious language in early newspapers to the use of imperatives. The second part is devoted to pamphlets and provides detailed analyses of news reporting and of impoliteness strategies. The last section is devoted to scientific news discourse and traces the early publication formats in their various manifestations.
List(s) this item appears in: New Arrivals 01-15 December 2025, Vol. 06, Issue 32
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Barcode
Books Books Indian Institute of Technology Tirupati General Stacks Non-fiction 072.22 JucE (11849) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Copy 01 Available 11849

In Early Modern Britain, new publication channels were developed and new textual genres established themselves. News discourse became increasingly more important and reached wider audiences, with pamphlets as the first real mass media. Newspapers appeared, first on a weekly and then on a daily basis. And scientific news discourse in the form of letters exchanged between fellow scholars turned into academic journals. The papers in this volume provide state-of-the art analyses of these developments.
The first part of the volume contains studies of early newspapers that range from reports of crime and punishment to want ads, and from traces of religious language in early newspapers to the use of imperatives. The second part is devoted to pamphlets and provides detailed analyses of news reporting and of impoliteness strategies. The last section is devoted to scientific news discourse and traces the early publication formats in their various manifestations.

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