As pointed out by Mugglestone (2003), among others, accent started to be a British obsession in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when the market for ‘proper speech’ flourished not only in the UK but also in the USA (see, for example, Algeo 2001; Beal 2004a; Hickey 2010). Together with orthoepists and elocutionists, actors were perceived as good models of ‘correct pronunciation’ which was a guarantee of reliability and success (Goring 2005; 2014). This paper argues that their experience on the stage favoured their profession as elocutionists. The qualitative analysis of the prefatorial materials of 18th-and 19th-century elocutionary manuals will show that actors/orthoepists had a primary role in the construction of the standard accent ideology and also in the making of American linguistic independence.

Eighteenth-and nineteenth-century theatre and the standard language ideology: actors as elocutionists [18th- and 19th-Century Theatre and the Standard Language Ideology: Actors as Elocutionists] / M. Sturiale. - In: TEXTUS. - ISSN 1824-3967. - 35:1(2022), pp. 59-73. [10.7370/103899]

Eighteenth-and nineteenth-century theatre and the standard language ideology: actors as elocutionists [18th- and 19th-Century Theatre and the Standard Language Ideology: Actors as Elocutionists]

M. Sturiale
2022

Abstract

As pointed out by Mugglestone (2003), among others, accent started to be a British obsession in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when the market for ‘proper speech’ flourished not only in the UK but also in the USA (see, for example, Algeo 2001; Beal 2004a; Hickey 2010). Together with orthoepists and elocutionists, actors were perceived as good models of ‘correct pronunciation’ which was a guarantee of reliability and success (Goring 2005; 2014). This paper argues that their experience on the stage favoured their profession as elocutionists. The qualitative analysis of the prefatorial materials of 18th-and 19th-century elocutionary manuals will show that actors/orthoepists had a primary role in the construction of the standard accent ideology and also in the making of American linguistic independence.
No
English
actors; elocutionists; standard accent; 19th-century Britain; 19th-century America;
Settore L-LIN/12 - Lingua e Traduzione - Lingua Inglese
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2022
Il Mulino
35
1
59
73
15
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Oral Communication in English: Established Trends. Good Practice(s). and Future Perspectives edited by Annalisa Zanola and John Casey Gooch ISBN: 978-88-15-14408-9
miur
MIUR
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Eighteenth-and nineteenth-century theatre and the standard language ideology: actors as elocutionists [18th- and 19th-Century Theatre and the Standard Language Ideology: Actors as Elocutionists] / M. Sturiale. - In: TEXTUS. - ISSN 1824-3967. - 35:1(2022), pp. 59-73. [10.7370/103899]
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M. Sturiale
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/956085
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