The ethos of language acts in joinvilles vie de saint louis
Author: Hyatte, Reginald
Source: Neophilologus, Volume 89, Number 1, January 2005 , pp. 3-21(19)
Publisher: Springer
Abstract:
In consideration of the attention that Jean de Joinville calls to moral qualities associated with language production, the essay attempts to determine the ethical character and value attached to the language acts he and others perform in La vie de saint Louis. As used here, language act refers to the communicative import of language production within a defined social context and to interactions among ethical valuation, rhetoric, and culture. The acts under examination include several types of rhetorical moves and narrative modes, such as testimony, praise and blame, exempla, the narrators silence in places where one might expect ethical valuation, and his self-representation as a teacher of ethics and, also, a trustworthy judge of moral value, particularly of others words. Moral correction plays a major part in the narratives language acts. The manner in which Joinville points to St. Louiss good words and deeds and no less prominently, his own as models indicates his will to correct the then king and kingdoms misguided ways.Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11061-004-7482-6
Affiliations: 1: Department of Languages, 011011011011011011011011The University of Tulsa, 600 S. College Avenue, 011011011011011011011011011Tulsa, 011011011011011011011011011OK, 01101101101101101101101101174104-3189, 011011011011011011011011011USA, Email: regina
Publication date: 2005-01-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Literature , Language & Linguistics
- By this author: Hyatte, Reginald

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