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The Cornish Language, Archaeology and the Origins of English Theatre

Spriggs Matthew. 2004. .
The Cornish Language, Archaeology and the Origins of English Theatre
BOOKPART, (2004 ) - SUBMITTEDVERSION - English (en-GB)

OPENACCESS - .
Audience : RESEARCHERS, STUDENTS
Cambridge: McDonald Institute Monograph Series
Subject
Cornish Language, Language Shift, Language Revival, Old English, English Literature, Archaeology, Linguistics, Genetics, Social History of Language, Brittonic Celtic Language
Domains
Linguistique, Sciences Sociales, Sciences humaines
Description

The paper discusses the decline and survival of the Cornish language, which died out in the early Modern period but has ongoing revival efforts. The language shift from a Brittonic Celtic language to Old English took place rapidly in much of England, with very few Brittonic words entering Old English. The paper highlights the neglect of the Cornish language in English literature due to it being written in Cornish, a language outside the boundaries of English literature. The author suggests that archaeology, linguistics, and genetics do not necessarily produce equivalent pasts, as the entities they deal with (archaeological cultures, linguistic speech communities, genetic populations) are not always equivalent. The author's interest in the social history of language stems from their association with archaeologists and linguists in Pacific archaeology, as well as their interest in the decline of the Cornish language.

Keywords
Language
English (en-GB)
Creators
Spriggs, Matthew
Contributors
Sources
In: M. Jones (ed), Traces of Ancestry: studies in honour of Colin Renfrew, Volume 2, pp. 143-161. Cambridge: McDonald Institute Monograph Series
Relation
Coverage
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