Kinship references in the British Parliament, 1800–2005




Jukka Tyrkkö

Ursula Lutzky, Minna Nevala

2019

Reference and Identity in Public Discourses

Pragmatics & Beyond New Series

306

978-90-272-0420-2

978-90-272-6205-9

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.306.04tyr



Family and kinship are fundamental concepts of human society and of political governance. Proceeding from the notion that frequency of reference can be taken as a simple measure of visibility and representation, this study examines diachronic trends of kinship reference in British parliamentary debates from 1800 to 2005. Using the Hansard Corpus and pattern-driven corpus linguistic methods, I show that changes in the frequencies of reference to kin reflect societal attitudes to gender roles.



Last updated on 26/11/2024 10:22:12 PM