"The mobile shall worship thee": Cant language in Thomas Shadwell's The Squire of Alsatia (1688)

Autores/as

  • Paula Schintu

Resumen

The dramatic increase in criminality in 16th-century England was behind the emergence of a new type of literary works known as roguish literature which dealt with the life and activities of beggars and lawbreakers. These rogues’ language, cant, became a major concern for many authors, who attached glossaries to their works for the benefit of those who were not familiar with it, marking the beginning of canting lexicography. It is within this framework that Thomas Shadwell (1640-1692) wrote his famous The Squire of Alsatia (1688), which is the focus of this study. This paper explores the use of cant language in this celebrated play from a linguistic and lexicographic point of view, arguing that its profuse employment of canting terminology, much of which is first documented in the play, made a significant contribution to studies in canting lexicography and proved its reliability as a historical portrait of 17th-century English cant. 

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