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            Intra-Writer Variation in Historical Sociolinguistics

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            Contributor(s)
            Schiegg, Markus (editor)
            Huber, Judith (editor)
            Language
            English
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            Abstract
            Intra-individual variation is an emerging research field in linguistics with a rapidly growing number of studies. In historical sociolinguistics, this trend has been slow, as it is still largely dominated by the macroscopic approaches of earlier sociolinguistics. Microscopic studies focusing on intra-individual variation in writing, i.e. intra-writer variation, however, are able to reveal how writers functionalize social or text-type variation for reasons such as audience design or persona creation. They may also provide insights into how ongoing changes were perceived by speakers and writers. In general, micro-approaches are able to uncover a wide array of possible factors influencing variation, which may not always carry sociolinguistic functions. This volume comprises twenty-two research articles on a wide range of languages and periods, all closely connected by their focus on intra-writer variation in historical texts and by their use of empirical and corpus-based approaches. The studies demonstrate that the challenges that historical material have for research on intra-individual variation can certainly be met and that the insights gleaned from analysing variation in individual writers are considerable.
            URI
            https://doab-dev.siscern.org/handle/20.500.12854/176031
            Keywords
            Elspaß; Historical; historical sociolinguistics; Huber; Intra; intra-individual variation in writing; intra-writer variation in historical texts; Joseph; Judith; Langer; Markus; Nils; Salmons; Schiegg; Sociolinguistics; Stephan; Vandenbussche; Variation; variationist linguistics; Writer
            DOI
            10.3726/b19157
            ISBN
            9781800797048, 9781800797055, 9781800797031
            Publisher
            Peter Lang International Academic Publishing Group
            Publication date and place
            Bern, 2023
            Series
            Historical Sociolinguistics,
            Pages
            574
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              This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871069.

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