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Bibliography

Garrison, Mary, Arpad P. Orbán, and Marco Mostert (eds), Spoken and written language: relations between Latin and the vernacular languages in the earlier Middle Ages, Utrecht Studies in Medieval Literacy, 24, Turnhout: Brepols, 2013.

  • edited collection
Citation details
Work
Spoken and written language: relations between Latin and the vernacular languages in the earlier Middle Ages
Place
Turnhout
Publisher
Brepols
Year
2013
Contributions indexed individually i.e. contributions for which a separate page is available
Description
Abstract (cited)
The linguistic situation of medieval Europe has sometimes been characterized as one of diglossia: one learned language, Latin, was used for religion, law, and documents, while the various vernaculars were used in other linguistic registers. Informing the relationship between Latin and the vernaculars was the choice of Latin as the language of the Western Roman Empire and the Roman Church. This choice entailed the possibility of a shared literary culture and heritage across Europe, but also had consequences for access to that heritage. Scholarship on the Romance languages has contested the relevance of the term diglossia, and the divergence between written or spoken Latin and Romance is a subject of energetic debate. In other linguistic areas, too, questions have been voiced. How can one characterize the interaction between Latin and the various vernaculars, and between the various vernaculars themselves? To what extent could speakers from separate linguistic worlds communicate? These questions are fundamental for anyone concerned with communication, the transmission of learning, literary history, and cultural interaction in the Middle Ages. This volume contains contributions by historians, cultural historians, and students of texts, language, and linguistics, addressing the subject from their various perspectives but at the same time trying to overcome familiar disciplinary divisions.
(source: Brepols)
Subjects and topics
Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
May 2013, last updated: December 2024