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Provincial Pastoral and Dispossessed Readers Provincial Pastoral and Dispossessed Readers
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Making a Puzzle of Print Making a Puzzle of Print
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Provincial Language and Political Offense Provincial Language and Political Offense
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Provincial Diversity: A “Mixed” Britain at the Heart of the Nation Provincial Diversity: A “Mixed” Britain at the Heart of the Nation
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Provincial Writing and Strategic Obscurity Provincial Writing and Strategic Obscurity
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Six “I Do Not Like London or Anything That Is in It”: The Provincial Offensive
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Published:June 2017
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Abstract
This chapter argues that provincial writers strategically deployed the obscurity that arose in representations of supposedly sentimental and familiar, yet also spatially remote, tongues. For the new genres that provincial writers developed, particularly print dialogues, they often left in place a frustrating opacity that haunts even the most intensely glossed texts. Sometimes invoking the language of English liberty, they critiqued what they saw as metropolitan incursions into provincial virtue. Ultimately, however, these writers reconstructed neither national nor provincial language communities but provisional and ephemeral social connections, reminding readers that languages create social bodies only intermittently and in part through opacity itself.
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