This essay discusses the manifold ways in which malapropisms, among other strategies, contribute to the comic effects achieved in 1066 and All That, a book meant to satirize early twentieth-century history manuals. After an overview of the book’s structure and contents, I will highlight examples in which linguistic choices cause semantic shifts resulting in humorous remarks. These typically sound like misremembered facts or mispronounced names, in a flurry of statements evoking the idiosyncratic usage of Mrs Malaprop, Richard Sheridan’s famous character. Throughout the text it is however difficult to draw a line between mere spoof and thinly-veiled ideological criticism: in carnivalesque uses, the maxims that underpin the Cooperative Principle can hardly apply, and reading between the lines, or indeed among semantic clusters, is indispensable.

(2017). Mrs Malaprop Goes to Hastings: History, Parody, and Language in 1066 and All That (1930) [journal article - articolo]. In ALTRE MODERNITÀ. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/83443

Mrs Malaprop Goes to Hastings: History, Parody, and Language in 1066 and All That (1930)

DOSSENA, Marina
2017-01-01

Abstract

This essay discusses the manifold ways in which malapropisms, among other strategies, contribute to the comic effects achieved in 1066 and All That, a book meant to satirize early twentieth-century history manuals. After an overview of the book’s structure and contents, I will highlight examples in which linguistic choices cause semantic shifts resulting in humorous remarks. These typically sound like misremembered facts or mispronounced names, in a flurry of statements evoking the idiosyncratic usage of Mrs Malaprop, Richard Sheridan’s famous character. Throughout the text it is however difficult to draw a line between mere spoof and thinly-veiled ideological criticism: in carnivalesque uses, the maxims that underpin the Cooperative Principle can hardly apply, and reading between the lines, or indeed among semantic clusters, is indispensable.
marina.dossena@unibg.it
articolo
2017
Inglese
online
Numero Speciale
219
232
esperti anonimi
Settore L-LIN/12 - Lingua e Traduzione - Lingua Inglese
humour; satire; academic writing; early twentieth-century English; cultural criticism
Dossena, Marina
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
open
(2017). Mrs Malaprop Goes to Hastings: History, Parody, and Language in 1066 and All That (1930) [journal article - articolo]. In ALTRE MODERNITÀ. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/83443
Non definito
1
1.1 Contributi in rivista - Journal contributions::1.1.01 Articoli/Saggi in rivista - Journal Articles/Essays
262
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