Abstract
This book recovers pragmatics within the history of medieval linguistics.
The introduction outlines the study of pragmatics from a critical history
of linguistics perspective, situating language study in a complex social
field and comparing medieval pragmatic ideas and metapragmatics with
assumptions in contemporary pragmatic theory. Pragmatics embraces
communication, expression, and understanding; it prioritizes meaning,
context, affect, and speaking position over formal grammar. Relevant
texts for late medieval pragmatics include grammatical and logical texts,
especially those by Roger Bacon, Robert Kilwardby, and anonymous grammarians,
and Peter (of) John Olivi. Other sources for medieval pragmatics
include life narrative (Margery Kempe), poetry (Chaucer), and heresy
records. Theoretical and everyday texts reveal provocative intersections
of Latin and vernacular intellectual and religious cultures and different
assumptions and ideologies concerning meaning, speech, and speakers.
Across these heterogenous, sometimes antagonistic discursive fields,
medieval intellectual history crosses paths with social history.
Publisher
Amsterdam University Press