Abstract
The chapter proposes an unconventional approach to the interpretation of medieval and post-medieval Latin textuality as post-colonial literature, in the sense of “expressed in a cultural system that in the post-Roman age is inevitably different from the writer’s native one and in a language other than the mother tongue”. This approach allows a new understanding of medieval Latin literature and early modernity as a secondary system of cultural production and of language as a communication code that can be analyzed with the linguistic tools of SLA.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
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