@misc{Lonati_Elisabetta_Language_2025, author={Lonati, Elisabetta}, 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={The study examines the entry Language in three major British dictionaries of arts and sciences published between 1728 and 1778. The aim is to highlight the ideological gaze which contributed to the construction of the emerging nation-state as represented by language. In other words, the analysis is focussed on the discourse about and around the British national and linguistic identity as promoted in the Cyclopaedia (1728), the Encyclopaedia Britannica (1768-1771), and Rees’s Cyclopaedia (1778-1788). The investigation demonstrates how the ideological load is carried out over time by using similar linguistic expressions and rhetorical strategies s.v. Language, and how language is pivotal in establishing the British nation and the expanding British Empire.}, title={Language ideology and national propagandain 18th-century British dictionaries of arts and sciences}, type={tekst}, doi={10.25951/14394}, }