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    The Whole World in a Book: Dictionaries in the Nineteenth Century

    The Whole World in a Book by Ogilvie, Sarah; Safran, Gabriella;

    Dictionaries in the Nineteenth Century

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 15 January 2020

    • ISBN 9780190913199
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages358 pages
    • Size 163x239x33 mm
    • Weight 680 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 13 illustrations
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    Short description:

    The 19th century saw a new wave of dictionaries, many of which remain household names. Those dictionaries didn't just store words; they represented imperial ambitions, nationalist passions, religious fervor, and utopian imaginings. This volume shows how 19th-century lexicography continues to influence how we speak, write, and think in the 21st century.

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    Long description:

    Nineteenth-century readers had an appetite for books so big they seemed to contain the whole world: immense novels, series of novels, encyclopaedias. Especially in Eurasia and North America, especially among the middle and upper classes, people had the space, time, and energy for very long books. More than other multi-volume nineteenth-century collections, the dictionaries, or their descendants of the same name, remain with us in the twenty-first century. Online or on paper, people still consult Oxford for British English, Webster for American, Grimm for German, Littré for French, Dahl for Russian. Even in spaces whose literary languages already had long philological and lexicographic traditions-Chinese, Japanese, Arabic, Persian, Greek, Latin-the burgeoning imperialisms and nationalisms of the nineteenth century generated new dictionaries.

    The Whole World in a Book explores a period in which globalization, industrialization, and social mobility were changing language in unimaginable ways. Newly automated technologies and systems of communication expanded the international reach of dictionaries, while rising literacy rates, book consumption, and advertising led to their unprecedented popularization. Dictionaries in the nineteenth century became more than dictionaries: they were battlefields between prestige languages and lower-status dialects; national icons celebrating the language and literature of the nation-state; and sites of innovative authorship where middle and lower classes, volunteers, women, colonial subjects, the deaf, and missionaries joined the ranks of educated white men in defining how people communicated and understood the world around them.

    In this volume, eighteen of the world's leading scholars investigate these lexicographers asking how the world within which they lived supported their projects? What did language itself mean for them? What goals did they try to accomplish in their dictionaries?

    The broad linguistic (and geographic) scope of the volume enables such a comprehensive overview and constitutes its distinct advantage.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction
    Sarah Ogilvie and Gabriella Safran
    1. The Unfinished Business of Eighteenth-Century European Lexicography
    John Considine
    2. Foreign Interests: Nineteenth-Century Lexicography in Russia and Japan
    Brian Kim
    3. The Lexical Object: Richardson's New Dictionary of the English Language (1836-1837)
    Michael Adams
    4. A Nineteenth-Century Garment Throughout: Description, Collaboration, and Thorough Coverage in the Oxford English Dictionary (1884-1928)
    Sarah Ogilvie
    5. Between Science and Romanticism: The Deutsches Wörterbuch of the Brothers Grimm
    Volker Harm
    6. Joost Halbertsma and the Lexicon Frisicum
    Anne Dykstra
    7. The First Scottish 'National' Dictionary: John Jamieson's Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language (1808/1825)
    Susan Rennie
    8. French Lexicography in Québec: The Works and Ideas of Oscar Dunn
    Wim Remysen and Nadine Vincent
    9. Christian Nationalism in Noah Webster's Lexicography
    Edward Finegan
    10. The Invention of the Modern Dictionary: Webster's Unabridged of 1864
    Peter Sokolowski
    11. Lord of the Words: Vladimir Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great-Russian Language as a National Epic
    Ilya Vinitsky
    12. Lexicography of the Entrenched Empire: Banih?n's and Pu-gong's Manchu-Chinese Literary Ocean (1821)
    M?rten Söderblom Saarela
    13. Steingass's Comprehensive Persian-English Dictionary and the Rise and Fall of Persian as a Transregional Language
    Walter Hakala
    14. Sharper Tools: Missionary Women's Lexicography in Asia
    Lindsay Rose Russell
    15. Dialect Jokebooks and Russian-Yiddish and English-Yiddish Dictionaries
    Gabriella Safran
    16. Dictionaries of Libras from the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First Century: Historical Continuities and Persistent Challenges
    Jorge Bidarra and Tania Aparecida Martins

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