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Danza, lingua e potere: (s)cortesia ne La dodicesima notte di Shakespeare
Author(s) -
Fabio Ciambella
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
linguae and
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2281-8952
pISSN - 1724-8698
DOI - 10.7358/ling-2020-002-ciam
Subject(s) - relation (database) , dance , power (physics) , conversation , art , literature , humanities , perspective (graphical) , absurdism , linguistics , sociology , philosophy , visual arts , physics , quantum mechanics , database , computer science
Dance in Elizabethan and Jacobean England was a practice closely linked to the notion of power, understood both from a political point of view – especially in relation to courtly dances – and from a gender perspective – as regards popular dances in particular. The purpose of this article is to conduct a linguistic analysis of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night 1.3, where two secondary characters, Sir Andrew Aguecheek and Sir Toby Belch, compete for the woman they both love – countess Olivia – by displaying absurd terpsichorean skills. With the support of conversation analysis and cognitive linguistics, this article underlines how the concept of power (intended both as man-man and man-woman relationship) is expressed at the linguistic level with a series of lexical and morphosyntactic strategies in the discourse about Renaissance dances.

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