Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/jspui/handle/10553/155795
| DC Field | Value | Language |
|---|---|---|
| dc.date.accessioned | 2026-01-23T13:39:52Z | - |
| dc.date.available | 2026-01-23T13:39:52Z | - |
| dc.date.issued | 2025 | en_US |
| dc.identifier.issn | 0104-0588 | en_US |
| dc.identifier.other | WoS | - |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://accedacris.ulpgc.es/jspui/handle/10553/155795 | - |
| dc.description.abstract | This study examines how dynamic modality, specifically the auxiliaries may and can, conveys politeness in nineteenth-century English instructive prose. A typology and the semantics of modality in English have been widely described, with particularemphasison epistemic and deontic readings (Bybee et al., 1994; Coates, 1983; Hoye, 1997; Nuyts, 2016; Palmer, 2001; van der Auwera & Plungian, 1998). Within politeness research, modals figure centrally among mitigation strategies in requests and directives (Blum-Kulka & Olshtain, 1984; Brown & Levinson, 1987; Leech, 2014). In instructive and household-hygiene genres, especially recipe books and manuals, work in the history of discourse shows how gendered and period-specific conventions condition grammatical and relational choices (Alonso-Almeida, 2013; Taavitsainen & Pahta, 2011). In contrast to the prevailing focus on epistemic and deontic meanings, dynamic modality (e.g., can, may as resources of ability/ possibility used to soften directives) remains comparatively underexplored in women's historical writing, a gap the present study addresses. It uses query-driven concordance searches and normalised frequency profiling, followed by full-context manual reading to disambiguate dynamic, deontic, and epistemic uses in the Corpus of Women's Instructive Texts in English, 1800-1899 (CoWITE19). It finds that may and can routinely soften directives by framing options and capacities rather than commands; in this corpus, can often presents circumstantial ability and procedural affordances, whereas may licenses alternatives for the reader. It concludes that dynamic modals function as a subtle yet powerful resource that enables women authors to manage authorial persona, maintain politeness, and instruct effectivelywithin nineteenth-century social constraints. | en_US |
| dc.language | eng | en_US |
| dc.relation.ispartof | Revista De Estudos Da Linguagem | en_US |
| dc.source | Revista De Estudos Da Linguagem [ISSN 0104-0588], v. 33 (4), p. 7-32, (Octubre-Diciembre 2025) | en_US |
| dc.subject | 6202 Teoría, análisis y crítica literarias | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | Language | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | Dynamic Modality | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | (Im)Politeness | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | 19Th-Century Women'S Writing | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | Recipe Texts | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | Corpus Linguistics | en_US |
| dc.subject.other | Gendered Language Use | en_US |
| dc.title | Dynamic modality and its relation to politeness in Late Modern English women's instructive writing | en_US |
| dc.title.alternative | Modalidade dinâmica e sua relação com a polidez na escrita instrutiva de mulheres no inglês moderno tardio | en_US |
| dc.type | info:eu-repo/semantics/Article | en_US |
| dc.type | Article | en_US |
| dc.identifier.doi | 10.35699/2237-2083.2025.56205 | en_US |
| dc.identifier.isi | 001639621000001 | - |
| dc.identifier.eissn | 2237-2083 | - |
| dc.description.lastpage | 32 | en_US |
| dc.identifier.issue | 4 | - |
| dc.description.firstpage | 7 | en_US |
| dc.relation.volume | 33 | en_US |
| dc.investigacion | Artes y Humanidades | en_US |
| dc.type2 | Artículo | en_US |
| dc.description.numberofpages | 26 | en_US |
| dc.utils.revision | Sí | en_US |
| dc.date.coverdate | Octubre-Diciembre 2025 | en_US |
| dc.identifier.ulpgc | Sí | en_US |
| dc.contributor.buulpgc | BU-HUM | en_US |
| dc.description.sjr | 0,133 | |
| dc.description.sjrq | Q3 | |
| dc.description.esci | ESCI | |
| dc.description.miaricds | 10,0 | |
| item.fulltext | Con texto completo | - |
| item.grantfulltext | open | - |
| Appears in Collections: | Artículos | |
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