‘Come what come may, Time, and the Houre, runs through the roughest Day’
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Published:2018-08-27
Issue:1
Volume:11
Page:81-104
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ISSN:1874-8767
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Container-title:Revisiting Shakespeare's Language
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language:en
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Short-container-title:ETC
Author:
Bondi Marina1,
Sezzi Annalisa1
Affiliation:
1. University of Modena and Reggio Emilia
Abstract
Abstract
The paper maps the lexico-grammatical resources of the representation of time in Macbeth, looking in particular at
the way futurity is portrayed. The study is based on concordance analysis of the top full lexical items in frequency lists and of
time-related keywords (generated using the other Shakespearian tragedies as a reference corpus). Paying particular attention to
the occurrences in Macbeth and his wife’s speeches, the analysis centres on the collocations and semantic preferences of the items
identified. The top full lexical items in the wordlist are shown to be related to the notion of time, especially contrasting the
present and the future, hence contributing to the pace of the plot in the play. Keywords highlight the connection of the notion of
time with the notion of fear and with the impossibility of predicting the future. In general, the analysis depicts a conceptual
space in which time and futurity are not connected to hope but to fear, thus creating a menacing universe that has its origins in
the protagonist himself, in the tension between deceitful prediction and frustrated volition.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference58 articles.
1. Expressions of futurity in contemporary English: a Construction Grammar perspective
2. An essay by Harold Bloom;Bloom,2005 [1998]
3. “Introduction,” from Macbeth (Bloom’s Modern Critical Interpretations series);Bloom,2008 [1987]