Pseudonyms as carriers of contextualised threat in 19th-century Irish English threatening notices

Marije Van Hattum, Arne Peters

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Abstract

This paper explores functions of pseudonyms in written threatening communication from a cognitive sociolinguistic perspective. It addresses the semantic domains present in pseudonyms in a corpus of 19th-century Irish English threatening notices and their cognitive functions in the construction of both cultural-contextualised threat and the threatener’s identity. We identify eight semantic domains that are accessed recurrently in order to create threat. Contributing to the notion of threat involves menacing war, violence, darkness and perdition directly, while also constructing a certain persona for the threatener that highlights their motivation, moral superiority, historical, local and circumstantial expertise, and their physical and mental aptitude. We argue that pseudonyms contribute to the deontic force of the threat by accessing cultural categories and schemas as well as conceptual metaphors and metonymies. Finally, we suggest that pseudonyms function as post-positioned semantic frame setters, providing a cognitive lens through which the entire threatening notice must be interpreted.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)29-53
Number of pages25
JournalEnglish World-Wide
Volume42
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Jan 2021

Keywords

  • Context-specificity
  • Irish English
  • Persona construction
  • Post-positioned semantic frame setters
  • Pseudonyms
  • Sociocultural cognition
  • Threatening communication

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