Tracing Speech Acts Through Text and Genre: Directives and Commissives in Queen Elizabeth I's Political Speeches and in Shakespeare's Henry V

Authors

  • Donatella Montini "Sapienza" Università di Roma

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13133/2239-1983/11591

Abstract

The essay investigates some stylistic and pragmatic variations across two genres and text-types pertaining to political oratory in Early Modern England. The speaker in question is the Renaissance monarch who, as many studies have shown from a cultural perspective, appropriates the forms of stage performance and, by manipulating them, acts his power and performs a relationship with his subjects. In this respect my study proposes to analyse and compare some aspects of non-literary and literary texts, Queen Elizabeth I’s parliamentary speeches and Shakespeare’s Henry V’s  monologues, as text-types which share  a strong persuasive and argumentative aim and are both speech-purposed. The working hypothesis of my case study is that, by drawing attention to two specific speech-acts, directives and commissives, the evaluation of the illocutionary force of their speeches will shed light also on some typical features of the political discourse of Early Modern England.

Published

2014-02-14

How to Cite

Montini, D. (2014). Tracing Speech Acts Through Text and Genre: Directives and Commissives in Queen Elizabeth I’s Political Speeches and in Shakespeare’s Henry V. Status Quaestionis, 2(5). https://doi.org/10.13133/2239-1983/11591

Issue

Section

Articles