Renaissance Syntax and Subjectivity : Ideological Contents of Latin and the Vernacular in Scottish Prose Chronicles

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Renaissance Syntax and Subjectivity : Ideological Contents of Latin and the Vernacular in Scottish Prose Chronicles

  • 著者名:Leeds, John C.
  • 価格 ¥12,049 (本体¥10,954)
  • Routledge(2017/03/02発売)
  • 3連休は読書を!Kinoppy 電子書籍・電子洋書 全点ポイント30倍キャンペーン(~2/23)
  • ポイント 3,270pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780754658122
  • eISBN:9781351904339

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Description

The relationship between Latin and the Scots vernacular in the chronicle literature of 16th-century Scotland provides the topic for this study. John Leeds here shows how the disposition of grammatical subjects, in the radically dissimilar syntactic systems of humanist neo-Latin and Scots, conditions the way in which "the subject" (i.e., the human individual) and its actions are conceived in the writing of history. In doing so, he extends the boundaries of existing critical literature on early modern "subjectivity" to include the subject of grammar, analyzing its incorporation into narrative sentences and illuminating the ideological contents of different systems for its deployment. Though focused on the chronicles of Renaissance Scotland, the argument can in principle be applied to the entire range of Latin-vernacular relations during the early modern period. While examining the intellectual culture of early modernity, Leeds also takes aim, at every stage of his argument, at the semiotic and social-constructionist orthodoxies that dominate the humanities today. Against the notion that human subjects are "discursive constructs," he argues for the subordination of discourse to realities, both material and immaterial, that are external to language. As part of this argument, he proposes a view of neo-Latin humanism as a resistance to the onset of modernity, arguing that Latin prose provides options (at once syntactic, ideological, and ontological) that vernacular culture has, to its considerable detriment, foreclosed. In sum, Leeds advocates a renewed and theoretically-informed commitment to the humanism that the humanities themselves have been at such pains, during the last scholarly generation, to depreciate.

Table of Contents

Contents: Preface; Sleeping beauty: accusative case, passive voice, and the subject of production; Against the vernacular: Ciceronian formalism and the problem of the individual; From the ground up: matter, spirit, and the linguistic sign in John Lesley's Chronicles of Stewart Scotland; Corpus Mysticum: the status of universals in John Mair's Chronicle of Greater Britain; Afterword; Bibliography; Index.

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