Introduction published In:
Exploring (im)politeness in ancient languages
Edited by Kim Ridealgh
[Journal of Historical Pragmatics 20:2] 2019
► pp. 169185
References (51)
References
Archer, Dawn. 2017. “Context and Historical (Socio)pragmatics Twenty Years On”. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 18 (2): 315–336. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Bax, Marcel and Nanne Streekstra. 2003. “Civil Rites: Ritual Politeness in Early Modern Dutch Letter-writing”. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 4 (2): 303–325. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Bax, Marcel and Dániel Z. Kádár. 2011. “The Historical Understandings of Historical (Im)politeness: Introductory Notes”. In Marcel Bax and Dániel Kádár (eds), Historical Understandings of Historical (Im)Politeness: Double Special Issue of Journal of Historical Pragmatics 12 (1/2): 1–24.Google Scholar
Bergs, Alexander. 2005. Social Networks and Historical Sociolinguistics: Studies in Morphosyntactic Variation in the Paston Letters (1421–1503). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
van der Bom, Isabelle and Karen Grainger. 2015. “Journal of Politeness Research: An Introduction”. Journal of Politeness Research 11 (2): 165–178. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Brown, Lucien. 2017. ““Nwuna’s Body is So Sexy”: Pop Culture and the Chronotopic Formulations of Kinship Terms in Korean”. Discourse, Context and Media 151: 1–10. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Brown, Roger and Albert Gilman. 1960. “Pronouns of Power and Solidarity”. In Thomas Sebeok (ed.), Style in Language, 253–276. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Brown, Penelope and Stephen C. Levinson. 1987. Politeness: Some Universals in Language Usage. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
de Clercq, Trevor and David Temperley. 2011. “A Corpus Analysis of Rock Harmony”. Popular Music 30 (1): 47–70. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Culpeper, Jonathan. 2017. “The Influence of Italian Manners on Politeness in England, 1550–1620”. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 18 (2): 195–213. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Eelen, Gino. 1999. “Politeness and Ideology: A Critical Review”. Pragmatics 9 (1): 163–173. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
. 2001. A Critique of Politeness Theories. Manchester: St Jerome.Google Scholar
Feezell, Jessica. 2017. “It’s Not Only Rock and Roll: The Influence of Music Preferences on Political Attitudes”. In Uche Onyebadi (ed.), Music as a Platform for Political Communication, 167–186. Hershey: IGI Global. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gao, Ersheng, Xiayun Zuo, Li Wang, Chaohua Zuo, Yan Cheng and Laurie Zabin. 2016. “How Does Traditional Confucian Culture Influence Adolescents’ Behavior in Three Asian Cities”. Journal of Adolescent Health 50 (3): 12–17. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Heidegger, Martin. 1991 [1927]. Being and Time. New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Ide, Sachiko. 1989. “Formal Forms and Discernment: Two Neglected Aspects of Universals of Linguistic Politeness”. Multilingua 8 (2–3): 223–248. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Janney, Richard and Arndt Horst. 1993. “Universality and Relativity in Cross-cultural Politeness Research: A Historical Perspective”. Multilingua 12 (1): 13–50. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Jucker, Andreas H. 2000. “‘Thou’ in the History of English: A Case for Historical Semantics or Pragmatics?” In Christiane Dalton-Puffer and Nikolaus Ritt (eds), Words: Structure, Meaning, Function. Festschrift for Dieter Kastovsky, 153–163. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Jucker, Andreas. 2011. “Positive and Negative Face as Descriptive Categories in the History of English”. In Marcel Bax and Dániel Kádár (eds), Historical Understandings of Historical (Im)politeness–Double Special Issue of Journal of Historical Pragmatics 12 (1/2): 178–197.Google Scholar
Kádár, Dániel Z. 2010. Historical Chinese Letter Writing. London: Bloomsbury.Google Scholar
2017. “Politeness in Pragmatics”. Oxford Research Encyclopaedias: Linguistics (online), DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kádár, Dániel Z. and Jonathan Culpeper (eds). 2010. Historical (Im)politeness. Berne: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Kádár, Dániel Z. and Michael Haugh. 2013. Understanding Politeness. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kádár, Dániel Z. and Sara Mills. 2011. “Introduction”. In Dániel Kádár and Sara Mills (eds), Politeness in East Asia, 1–17. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kim, Tae Wan and Alan Strudler. 2012. “Workplace Civility: A Confucian Approach”. Business Ethics Quarterly 22 (3): 557–577. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Klein, Lawrence. 1994. “‘Politeness’ as Linguistic Ideology in Late Seventeenth- and Early Eighteenth-Century England”. In Dieter Stein and Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostede (eds), Towards a Standard English, 31–50. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Kohnen, Thomas. 2005. “Historical Linguistics: Corpus Linguistics, Text Linguistics and Historical Pragmatics”. In Stephan Kohl (ed.), Anglistik – Research Paradigms and Institutional Policies, 1930–2000, 271–292. Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag.Google Scholar
Kopytko, Roman. 1995. “Linguistic Politeness Strategies in Shakespeare’s Plays”. In Andreas Jucker (ed.), Historical Pragmatics: Pragmatic Development in the History of English, 515–540. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kreyer, Rolf. 2015. “‘Funky Fresh Dressed to Impress’: A Corpus-linguistic View on Gender Roles in Pop Songs”. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 20 (2): 174–204. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kurokawa, Shozo. 1972. “Japanese Terms of Address: Some Usages of First and Second Person Pronouns”. Papers in Japanese Linguistics 1 (2): 228–238. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lass, Robert. 1997. Historical Linguistics and Language Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lee, Cher Leng. 2012. “Self-presentation, Face and First-person Pronouns in the Analects”. Journal of Politeness Research 8 (1): 75–92. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Liu, Lydia H. 1995. Translingual Practice: Literature, National Culture and Translated Modernity, China. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Magnusson, Lynne. 2007. “A Pragmatics for Interpreting Shakespeare’s Sonnets 1 to 20: Dialogue Scripts and Erasmian Intertexts”. In Susan Fitzmaurice and Irma Taavitsainen (eds), Methods in Historical Pragmatics, 167–183. Berlin and New York: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Nevalainen, Terttu. 2003. Socio-Historical Linguistics: Language Change in Tudor and Stuart England. Longman: London.Google Scholar
Nichols, Johanna. 1992. Linguistic Diversity across Space and Time. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Pakis, Valentin. 2011. “Insults, Violence, and the Meaning of lytegian in the Old English Battle of Maldon ”. In Marcel Bax and Dániel Kádár (eds), Historical Understandings of Historical (Im)Politeness–Double Special Issue of Journal of Historical Pragmatics 12 (1/2): 198–229.Google Scholar
Richter, Max M. 2008. “Musical Sexualisation and the Gendered Habitus in Yogyakarta”. Indonesia and the Malay World 36 (104): 21–45. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Ridealgh, Kim. 2016a. “Polite like an Egyptian? Case Studies of Politeness in the Late Ramesside Letters”. Journal of Politeness Research 12 (2): 245–266. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
(ed.). 2016b. Case Studies in Historical Politeness (Ancient Languages) – Special Issue of Journal of Politeness Research 12 (2).Google Scholar
Ruhi, Śukriye and Dániel Z. Kádár. 2011. “‘Face’ across Historical Cultures: A Comparative Study of Turkish and Chinese”. In Marcel Bax and Dániel Kádár (eds), Historical Understandings of Historical (Im)Politeness – Double Special Issue of Journal of Historical Pragmatics 12 (1/2): 25–48.Google Scholar
Silverstein, Michael. 1993. “Metapragmatic Discourse and Metapragmatic Function”. In John A. Lucy (ed.), Reflexive Language: Reported Speech and Metapragmatics, 33–58. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Spencer-Oatey, Helen and Dániel Z. Kádár. 2016. “The Bases of (Im)politeness Evaluations: Culture, the Moral Order and the East–West Debate”. East Asian Pragmatics 1 (1): 73–106. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Taavitsainen, Irma and Andreas Jucker. 2003. Diachronic Perspectives on Address Term Systems. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
. 2015. “Twenty Years of Historical Pragmatics: Origins, Developments and Changing Thought Styles”. Journal of Historical Pragmatics 16 (1): 1–24. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Unceta Gómez, Luis. 2016. “Congratulations in Latin Comedy: Types and Functions”. Journal of Politeness Research 12 (2): 267–290. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Watts, Richard J. 1992. “Linguistic Politeness and Politic Verbal Behaviour: Reconsidering Claims for Universality”. In Richard J. Watts, Sachiko Ide and Konrad Ehlich (eds), Politeness in Language: Studies in Its History, Theory and Practice, 43–70. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2003. Politeness. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Wente, Edward. 1990. Letters from Ancient Egypt. Atlanta, Georgia: Scholars Press.Google Scholar
Werner, Valentin Ed. 2018. The Language of Pop Culture. London: Routledge. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Cited by (3)

Cited by three other publications

Rubio Orecilla, Francisco Javier
2024. (Im)Politeness in Vedic Sanskrit. Journal of Historical Pragmatics DOI logo
Ridealgh, Kim
2021. Talking to God:conceptualizing an alternative politeness approach for the human/divine relationship. Journal of Politeness Research 17:1  pp. 61 ff. DOI logo
Ridealgh, Kim & L. Unceta Gómez
2020. Potestas and the language of power: Conceptualising an approach to Power and Discernment politeness in ancient languages. Journal of Pragmatics 170  pp. 231 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 19 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.