@misc{Vezzosi_Letizia_The_2025, author={Vezzosi, Letizia}, address={Kielce}, howpublished={online}, contents={5 Dedicatoria 9 Tabula gratulatoria 11 Elisabetta Cecconi, Christina Samson and Isabella Martini, Introduction 45 Letizia Vezzosi, The propagandistic narrative in Saint Erkenwald 69 Elisabetta Cecconi, Propaganda in 17th-century pamphlets on Jamaica: A corpus-assisted discourse study (1655-1700) 95 Elisabetta Lonati, Language ideology and national propaganda in 18th-century British dictionaries of arts and sciences 125 Massimo Sturiale, Elocution, editorials, and Englishness: The role of print media in shaping accent attitudes in the long nineteenth century 147 Christina Samson, Fanning fires. A corpus assisted analysis of women’s letters during the 1857-58 Indian uprisings 171 Matylda Włodarczyk, The bluestocking in the Polish press (1830s-1890s): Othering women through code-switching, borrowing and loan translations 201 Gabriella Del Lungo and Sabrina Cappelli, Propaganda discourse in an imperial setting: The case of Lytton Strachey’s Queen Victoria 233 DavideMazzi, “The mask is off at last!”: Propaganda discourse in the Irish Civil War 253 BirteBös, Propaganda in TIME Magazine – A diachronic corpus-assisted discourse study 281 Roberta Facchinetti, Striking a balance between norms of impartiality and adversarialness in broadcast interviews 299 Marina Bondi, Jessica Jane Nocella, Roberto Paganelli, Vaccines discourse: A diachronic case study 325 Isabel Ermida, Ageist propaganda on social media: Disguising hate speech through mock politeness}, year={2025}, publisher={Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jana Kochanowskiego w Kielcach}, language={angielski}, abstract={Saint Erkenwald is an anonymous Middle English alliterative poem whose genre has been long debated, that is whether it is an instance of romance, a hagiographical text or something else, without reaching a general consensus. As a matter of fact, the poem develops around three different themes, linked to each other only through the figure of the saint: England’s past, the role of baptism and the translation of the Trajan legend into an English context, themes mirroring some of the main concerns of the fourteenth- and fifteenth-century England, characterised by an emerging English feeling and pride. The present paper will analyse the poem from a completely different perspective, as a form of political and theological propaganda. Through examination of the linguistic strategies used in the narrative, it will show that the author aims to foster a civic unification, by means of consolidating the Christian orthodox view and incorporating the past of England.}, title={The propagandistic narrative in Saint Erkenwald}, type={tekst}, doi={10.25951/14392}, }