Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10662/20197
Títulos: The British Sentimental Novel Corpus (BSNC) and the ROC-DDC alternation at the level of the individual
Autores/as: Ruano San Segundo, Pablo
Bouso Rivas, Tamara
Palabras clave: British Sentimental Novel Corpus;Corpus de la novela sentimental británica;Reaction Object Construction;Construcción de objetos de reacción;Direct Discourse Construction;Construcción directa del discurso;ROC-DDC alternation;Alternancia ROC-DDC;Individual and aggregate levels;Nivel individual y agregado;19th century fiction;Ficción del siglo XIX
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Resumen: This article provides a description of the British Sentimental Novel Corpus (BSNC) and a case study that explores, at the level of the individual, the relation between the Reaction Object Construction (ROC) and the Direct Discourse Construction (DDC). The BSNC is a large-scale specialised corpus that comprises full novels of eleven canonical authors across three generations from 19th century British fiction. It aims at studying language as both a social and a cognitive phenomenon and, in line with a recent trend in historical sociolinguistics, at exploring the interaction between individual and aggregate levels (see Fonteyn 2017; Hilpert 2020; Petré et al. 2019). The first part describes the methodological principles that underlie the design and compilation of the BSNC. In the second part, we present a new case study that aims to determine whether our previous aggregate findings also hold at the individual level. The results serve to confirm our hypothesis: first, individual changes in the ROC and the DDC run in parallel across almost the entire 19th century, correlating most significantly between 1851 and 1860. Second, the aggregate-level division of labour between these two functionally similar constructions turned out to be a feature of all authors in the BSNC. Last, the ROC-DDC alternation has been attested in an important proportion of the BSNC novels, with only a relatively small group of texts using solely the older and less extravagant variant (i.e. the DDC). This suggests that the alternation as such represents a cognitive reality for these individual writers across their lifespan.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10662/20197
ISSN: 1502-7694
DOI: 10.35360/njes.659
Colección:DFING - Artículos

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