Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Mehrsprachigkeit im Spiegel des Buchdrucks: Das spanische Italien im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert

Show simple item record

dc.creator Ambrosch-Baroua, Tina
dc.date 2021-02-10T12:58:18Z
dc.date 2016-05-18 00:00:00
dc.date 2020-04-01T14:17:05Z
dc.date 2016
dc.date.accessioned 2023-02-17T21:36:24Z
dc.date.available 2023-02-17T21:36:24Z
dc.identifier 608236
dc.identifier OCN: 1030814919
dc.identifier http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/32707
dc.identifier https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/28386
dc.identifier https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/32707/1/608236.pdf
dc.identifier https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/32707/1/608236.pdf
dc.identifier https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/32707/1/608236.pdf
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/248450
dc.description During the sixteenth and seventeenth century large parts of Italy were under Spanish dominion, the consequence of which was a linguistic contact that lasted over 200 years. However, due to the traditionally tight link between Italian language historiography and national historiography, the multilingual communicative space of Spanish Italy has only recently become an object of research. By focusing on four Spanish-dominated areas – the two metropolises of Naples (Regno di Napoli) and Milan (Milanesado), as well as the two islands of Sicily (Regno di Sicilia) and Sardinia (Regno di Sardegna) – the present work therefore presents a fundamental, extensive, and comparative case study of the history of plurilingualism and of letterpress printing in Italia spagnola. For the first time, even methodologically, letterpress printing will be considered as an indicator of plurilingualism, and not simply as a gauge for Tuscanisation, as scholars have previously concluded. The corpus, which has been elaborated on the basis of a specifically developed online title-database consisting of over 3.000 Spanish, bi- and multilingual printed works, is analyzed by combining quantification and qualification methods. The statistical evaluation of book production and distribution of languages and domains associated therewith have been integrated, or rather validated, by qualitative comments on exemplary single works. Herein, the following questions have been examined: How is multilingualism generally, and with regard to the Spanish language in particular, reflected in book production? How often and in which domains of discourse is Spanish used? Which profiles of competence of the producers (authors and printers) and the recipients can be qualitatively traced through single printed works? What evidence of the conventionalization of multilingualism in the form of linguistic teaching material can be provided? Which plurilinguistic practices can be reconstructed on the basis of the prints? Is bilingualism or multilingualism reflected on (and eventually how), and, if so, how is it discussed and assessed? How does the respective communicative space, characterized by the constant presence of the Spanish language, configure itself in the consciousness of the communicants within the field of perceptive linguistics? Thus, the aim was to investigate the degree of Hispanicization of Spanish Italy on the basis of the quantified printed language, and to discuss the practices of multilingualism, the attitudes towards the Spanish language, and how plurilingualism was reflected in selected printed works and their paratexts. The overall segment of the Spanish book production can be defined as a marginal phenomenon with a limited target group, and therefore multilingualism in Spanish Italy, when considered through letterpress printing, assumes an elitist status. However, the respective empirical results of the four partial corpora offer prominent regional differences, with each of the four communicative spaces presenting with their own, specific profile of multilingualism. The contrast of the single cases thus leads to a typology between Spanish Sardinia and the other three areas. The case reconstructions furnish the evidence that Spanish Sardinia, for reasons beyond existing language politics, represents the exception, or rather, the extreme case of problem-focused plurilingualism and Hispanicization. The remaining three areas (Naples, Milan and Sicily) bundle to form a second type – on account of their indifference towards language diversity as well as their pragmatic, mostly implicit, conventionalized handling of multilingualism, they can be classified as normal cases of language contact.
dc.description Wie schlägt Mehrsprachigkeit in der Frühen Neuzeit buchstäblich zu Buche? Am Beispiel des spanischen Italien untersucht die Studie im Buchdruck gespiegelte Sprachverhältnisse sowie Formen und Praktiken der Mehrsprachigkeit im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert. Vier mehrsprachige Kommunikationsräume – die zwei Metropolen Neapel und Mailand sowie die zwei Inseln Sizilien und Sardinien – werden in ihrer Dynamik analysiert, kontrastiert und typologisiert. Die vier Mehrsprachigkeitsprofile werden mittels einer quantifizierenden und qualitativen Methodenkombination rekonstruiert. Dabei ermittelt die Autorin, in welchen Diskursdomänen der gedruckten Schriftlichkeit Spanisch wie häufig verwendet wurde. Welche individuellen sprachlichen Kompetenzen der Produzenten sowie der Rezipienten lassen sich von mehrsprachigen Druckwerken ableiten? Welche zielgerichtete Mehrsprachigkeit in Form von Sprachlehrwerken ist nachzuweisen? (Wie) wird gesellschaftliche Mehrsprachigkeit thematisiert, diskutiert und bewertet? Anhand der Auswertung von 3.000 spanischen, zwei- und mehrsprachigen Druckwerken werden sowohl Erkenntnisse zur Buchproduktion als auch zu wichtigen Einzelwerken und Paratexten gewonnen. Die Analyse der Teilkorpora bringt markante regionale Unterschiede zum Vorschein und zeigt, dass sich das spanische Sardinien als ein Extremfall von Sprachenpluralität darstellt, die anderen drei Territorien (Regno di Napoli, Regno di Sicilia, Milanesado) jedoch aufgrund der Entdramatisierung von Mehrsprachigkeit als faktische Normalfälle von Sprachkontakt zu interpretieren sind. Die Autorin legt damit erstmals eine umfassende Fall- und Vergleichsstudie zur Geschichte der Mehrsprachigkeit und des Buchdrucks der Italia spagnola vor. Tina Ambrosch-Baroua hat als wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin für Sprachwissenschaft am Institut für Italienische Philologie der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München promoviert. Ihre Forschungsinteressen betreffen die italienische Sprachgeschichte, die Grammatikographie sowie die historische und aktuelle Mehrsprachigkeitsforschung. Webseite: http://uni-muenchen.academia.edu/TinaAmbroschBaroua"
dc.format image/jpeg
dc.format image/jpeg
dc.format image/jpeg
dc.language ger
dc.publisher Modern Academic Publishing
dc.rights open access
dc.subject 1700
dc.subject mehrsprachigkeit
dc.subject buchdruck
dc.subject frühe neuzeit 1500
dc.subject printing
dc.subject kommunikationsraum
dc.subject early modern times 1500-1700
dc.subject italian language history
dc.subject sprachkontakt
dc.subject multilingualism
dc.subject italienische sprachgeschichte
dc.subject language communication
dc.subject communication
dc.subject Latein
dc.subject Mailand
dc.subject Neapel
dc.subject Sardinien
dc.subject Sizilien
dc.subject Spanien
dc.subject Spanische Sprache
dc.subject bic Book Industry Communication::C Language::CF linguistics::CFB Sociolinguistics
dc.subject bic Book Industry Communication::C Language::CF linguistics::CFD Psycholinguistics::CFDM Bilingualism & multilingualism
dc.subject bic Book Industry Communication::C Language::CF linguistics::CFF Historical & comparative linguistics
dc.subject bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBL History: earliest times to present day::HBLH Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700
dc.subject bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBT History: specific events & topics::HBTB Social & cultural history
dc.title Mehrsprachigkeit im Spiegel des Buchdrucks: Das spanische Italien im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert
dc.resourceType book
dc.alternateIdentifier 9783946198116;9783946198093;9783946198109
dc.alternateIdentifier 10.16994/bad
dc.licenseCondition open access
dc.licenseCondition Attribution 4.0 International
dc.licenseCondition Attribution 4.0 International
dc.licenseCondition Attribution 4.0 International
dc.identifierdoi 10.16994/bad
dc.relationisPublishedBy 138dda66-e951-4a5d-8249-e809613d40ff
dc.relationisbn 9783946198116;9783946198093;9783946198109
dc.pages 436
dc.placepublication Cologne


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
608236.pdf.jpg 10.14Kb image/jpeg View/Open
608236.pdf.jpg 10.14Kb image/jpeg View/Open
608236.pdf.jpg 10.14Kb image/jpeg View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

  • Directory of Open Access Books (DOAB) [5044]
    DOAB is a discovery service for peer reviewed open access books and book publishers that indexes and provides access to high quality, open access, peer-reviewed books.

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Advanced Search

Browse