UID:
almahu_9947382620302882
Format:
1 online resource (x, 286 pages) :
,
illustrations; digital file(s).
ISBN:
1-5261-3787-9
,
1-280-73393-4
,
9786610733934
,
1-84779-059-3
,
1-4237-0631-5
Series Statement:
Politics Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain
Content:
Human beings have developed a superabundance of ways of communicating with each other. Some, such as writing, are several millennia old. This book focuses on the relationship between speech and writing both within a single language, Welsh, and between two languages, Welsh and English. It demonstrates that the eighteenth-century Scottish clergy used the popular medium of Gaelic in oral and written form to advance the Gospel. The experience of literacy in early modern Wales was often an expression of legal and religious authority reinforced by the spoken word. This included the hearing of proclamations and other black-letter texts publicly read. Literate Protestant clergymen governed and shaped the Gaelic culture by acting as the bridge-builders between oral and literary traditions, and as arbiters of literary taste and the providers of reading material for newly literate people.
Note:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
,
Also available in print form.
,
English
Additional Edition:
ISBN 0-7190-5747-7
Additional Edition:
ISBN 0-7190-5746-9
Language:
English
Subjects:
English Studies
Keywords:
Aufsatzsammlung
DOI:
10.7765/9781526137876
URL:
Volltext
(kostenfrei)