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The long line of the Middle English alliterative revival : rhythmically coherent, metrically strict, phonologically English
Abstract: text ; This study contributes to the search for metrical order in the 90,000 extant long lines of the late fourteenth-century Middle English Alliterative Revival. Using the 'Gawain'-poet's 'Patience' and 'Cleanness', it refutes nineteenth- and twentieth-century scholars who mistook rhythmic liveliness for metrical disorganization and additionally corrects troubling missteps that scholars have taken over the last five years. 'Chapter One: Tame the "Gabble of Weaker Syllables"' rehearses the traditional, but mistaken view that long lines are barely patterned at all. It explains the widely-accepted methods for determining which syllables are metrically stressed and which are not: Give metrical stress to the syllables that in everyday Middle English were probably accented. 'Chapter Two: An Environment for Demotion in the B-Verse' introduces the relatively stringent metrical template of the b-verse as a foil for the different kind of meter at work in the a-verse. 'Chapter Three: Rhythmic Consistency in the Middle English Alliterative Long Line' examines the structure of the a-verse and considers the viability of verses with more than the normal two beats. An empirical investigation considers whether rhythmic consistency in the long line depends on three-beat a-verses. 'Chapter Four: Dynamic "Unmetre" and the Proscription against Three Sequential Iambs' posits an explanation for the unusual distributions of metrically unstressed syllables in the long line and finds that the 'Gawain'-poet's rhythms avoid the even alternation of beats and offbeats with uncanny precision. 'Chapter Five: Metrical Promotion, Linguistic Promotion, and False Extra-Long Dips' takes the rest of the dissertation as a foundation for explaining rhythmically puzzling a-verses. A-verses that seem to have excessively long sequences of offbeats and other a-verses that infringe on b-verse meter prove amenable to adjustment through metrical promotion. 'Conclusion: Metrical Regions in the Long Line' synthesizes the findings of the previous chapters in a survey of metrical tension in the long line. It additionally articulates the key theme of the dissertation: Contrary to traditional assumptions, Middle English alliterative long lines have variable, instead of consistent, numbers of beats and highly regulated, instead of liberally variable, arrangements of metrically unstressed syllables. ; English
Keyword: Accent; Alliteration; Beardsley; Beat; Beowulf; Brogan; Cable; Chaucer; Chomsky; Cleanness; Demotion; Duggan; English; Gawain; Iambic pentameter; Language; Linguistics; Medieval; Metrical; Metrical stress; Middle English; Minkova; Patience; Pause; Pearl; Philology; Phonological; Phonology; Poetics; Poetry; Promotion; Prosody; Rhythm; Saintsbury; Shakespeare; Tension; Verse; Wimsatt; Yakovlev
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5044
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2
Misreading English meter : 1400-1514
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3
Ship English
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4
Rum, ram, ruf, and rym: Middle English alliterative meters
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5
Kaluza's law and the progress of Old English metrics
In: Development in prosodic systems. - Berlin : Mouton de Gruyter (2003), 145-158
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6
Issues for a new history of English prosody
In: Studies in the history of the English language. - Berlin [u.a.] : Mouton de Gruyter (2002), 125-151
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7
English historical metrics
Borroff, Marie (Mitarb.); Russom, Geoffrey (Mitarb.); Osberg, Richard (Mitarb.). - Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1996
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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8
A history of the English language
In: Studies in language <Amsterdam>. - Amsterdam : Benjamins 18 (1994) 1, 256-257
OLC Linguistik
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9
Syllable Weight in Old English Meter: Grids, morae and Kaluza's law
In: Diachronica. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 11 (1994) 1, 1-12
OLC Linguistik
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10
Syllable weight in Old English meter : grids, morae, and Kaluza's law
In: Diachronica. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 11 (1994) 1, 1-11
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11
A History of the English Language (4th ed.)
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 15 (1994) 1, 151
OLC Linguistik
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12
Middle English and Early Modern English studies
Gneuss, Helmut (Mitarb.); Cable, Thomas (Mitarb.); Reichl, Karl (Mitarb.)...
In: Language and civilization ; 1. - Frankfurt-on-Main [u.a.] : Lang (1992), 164-282
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13
Philology : analysis of written records
In: Research guide on language change. - Berlin [u.a.] : Mouton de Gruyter (1990), 97-106
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14
Standards from the past : the conservative syllable structure of the alliterative revival
In: Standardizing English. - Knoxville : The Univ. of Tennessee Press (1989), 42-56
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15
A history of the English language
Baugh, Albert C.; Cable, Thomas. - London [u.a.] : Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1987
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UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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16
A history of the English language
Baugh, Albert C.; Cable, Thomas. - London [u.a.] : Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1978
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