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Telling tales in Shakespeare’s drama


ISSN: 2611-1349
ISBN: 978 88 32193 92 3
Language: English
Publisher: Paolo Loffredo Editore Srl
Sales price 14,50 €
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Telling tales in Shakespeare’s drama

The present volume aims to quantitatively and qualitatively analyse the pragmatic strategies of verbal deception within All’s Well That Ends Well and Measure for Measure, contributing both to the literary and linguistic discussions on the phenomenon of interpersonal deceit. The first chapter introduces the theoretical basis of historical pragmatics and pragma-stylistics, contextualising the phenomenon of lying in the early modern period. The second chapter outlines the original methodology used in order to conduct the textual analysis presented in the third chapter.
The choice to lie has to do with the use of language and the construction of meaning; it is a fundamentally pragmatic matter. Yet, untruthfulness in interpersonal communication raises a set of thorny theoretical issues within the current pragmatic framework. This volume outlines an innovative approach to the theory of lying: a character’s choice to lie outright or to “merely mislead” can be viewed from a pragmatic perspective as a distinction between what is said and what is meant but also as a strategic choice between going on-record or staying off-record. This reappropriation of Brown and Levinson’s terminology of politeness (1978; 1987) is not purely for taxonomic purposes, rather it has far-reaching theoretical ramifications which permit a workable distinction between two forms of covert untruthfulness.
By quantifying and categorising strategies of verbal deception according to these pragmatic parameters, the author investigates the forms and functions of lying in the early modern problem comedies. The quantitative data serve to guide the qualitative pragma-stylistic analysis of salient extracts from the plays. Pertinent examples of interpersonal mendacity are analysed according to their conversational and narratological strategies and structures in order to better understand their contribution to processes of characterisation. The differing strategies and divergent consequences of the characters’ deceit are explored in relation to the central questions of both problem comedies.

Autor

Aoife Beville obtained her PhD from the University of Naples L’Orientale in May 2022 where her research focussed on the pragma-stylistic analysis of lying in the “problem comedies”. She is an Adjunct Lecturer in English Language (eCampus University) and English Linguistics (University of Naples L’Orientale). She has presented her research findings at the PALA (Poetics and Language Association) Annual Conference 2021 and at the IASEMS (Italian Association for Shakespeare and Early Modern Studies) Graduate Conference, 2021. Her recent publications focus on multimodal stylistics (‘Salvator Rosa and Ann Radcliffe: A Study in Style’, in Reception Studies and Adaptation: A Focus on Italy, eds Giulia Magazzù, Valentina Rossi, and Angela Sileo, 46–71, 2020) and the pragmatics of deceit (‘”An Infinite and Endless Liar”: Paroles as a Case Study of the Pragmatics of Lying in Shakespeare’, in Linguae &, 2-2021, 79-101).


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