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Languages and Communities in Early Modern Europe

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Languages and Communities in Early Modern Europe Synopsis

In this magisterial study, Peter Burke explores the social and cultural history of the languages spoken or written in Europe between the invention of printing and the French Revolution, arguing that, from a linguistic point of view, 1450 to 1789 should be regarded as a distinct period. One major theme of the book is the relation between languages and communities (regions, churches, occupations and genders as well as nations) and the place of language as a way of identifying others as well as a symbol of one's own identity. A second, linked theme is that of competition: between Latin and the vernaculars, between different vernaculars, dominant and subordinate, and finally between different varieties of the same vernacular, such as standard languages and dialects. Written by one of Europe's leading cultural historians, this book restores the history of the many languages of Europe in a large variety of contexts.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780521828963
Publication date:
Author: Peter University of Cambridge Burke
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 226 pages
Series: The Wiles Lectures
Genres: European history
Social and cultural history