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UNDERSTANDING A LANGUAGE OF ‘ARISTOCRACY’, 1700–1850*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 May 2013
Abstract
This article engages with current debates about linguistic usage in a new way. It examines linguistic change, the shifts in frequency of usage of ‘aristocracy’, both qualitatively and quantitatively, at specific moments and over time, in print during the period 1700 to 1850. Digital resources are utilized to provide broad quantitative evidence not previously available to historians. The potential use and value of digitized sources is also explored in calculating the volume and frequency of keyword appearance within a broad set of genres. This article also examines qualitatively usage of ‘aristocracy’ by contemporaries and historians and concludes that historians have often used the term anachronistically. It reveals that for much of the eighteenth century ‘aristocracy’ was entirely a political term confined primarily to the educated elite but that by 1850 it had become a common social descriptor of an elite class. It also compares the trajectory of usage of ‘aristocracy’ with that of ‘democracy’ and accounts for the divergence in such usage. It is argued here that analysing the prevalence and usage of ‘aristocracy’ in contemporary contexts reveals an important narrative of linguistic changes that parallel shifts in political and social culture.
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References
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107 ECCO proved more unstable in this regard than other databases such as British newspapers.
108 Examples include zotero, TAPoR, Google Ngram, and the Firefox extension Scrutiny but more are emerging all the time. See also the database Connected histories: British history sources 1500–1900.
109 Google Ngram uses Google Books database with over 1,000,000 books published in English from 1500 to 2008. Bookworm is a collaborative project between the Harvard Cultural Observatory, the Open Library, and the Open Science Data Cloud. Bookworm uses texts in the public domain from the Open Library and Internet Archive. Bookworm enables graphical searches to explore textual trends across approximately 950,000 books from 1700. See http://bookworm.culturomics.org/ and http://openlibrary.org/. Google Ngram is case sensitive but Bookworm enables a non-case sensitive field, chosen for all Bookworm graphs here.
110 See Ngram and Bookworm Graphs 1.
111 Table 1.
112 Table 1.
113 Table 4. ‘Ariftocra*’ showed no hits on this database.
114 Table 1.
117 See Colley, Britons, pp. 244–50; Rogers, N., Crowds, culture and politics in Georgian Britain (Oxford, 1998)Google Scholar, ch. 7; Vernon, Politics and the people, ch. 6; Wilson, K., The sense of the people: politics, culture and imperialism in England, 1715–1785 (Cambridge, 1995)Google Scholar. For women in radicalism, see Bush, M. L., ‘The women at Peterloo: the impact of female reform on the Manchester meeting of 16 August 1819’, History, 294 (2004), pp. 209–32Google Scholar; Custer, P. A., ‘Refiguring Jemima: gender work and politics in Lancashire, 1770–1820’, Past and Present, 195 (2007), pp. 127–58Google Scholar.
118 Table 2.
119 Google Ngram and Bookworm Graphs 2. The growth of ‘aristocracy’ from the 1790s is more immediately marked on Bookworm.
120 Table 4.
122 Both Google Ngram and Bookworm warn users that searches in earlier centuries are less reliable since fewer texts are available.
124 Table 2.
126 See Epstein, Radical expression, ch. 1; Hall-Witt, ‘Reforming the aristocracy’, p. 236.
127 Hessayon and Finnegan, eds., Varieties of English radicalism, p. 3.
128 Some databases such as ECCO contain editions of texts printed outside Britain, primarily here America and Ireland. Dates run from 1 January to 31 December of all given years in all databases searched here. These datasets are generally not case sensitive.
129 Google labs Ngram viewer within which these graphs were created displays a graph showing the frequency of word occurrence over a specified time using the Google books database. See http://books.google.com/Ngrams. The y-axis shows what percentage of words contained in the Google books sample are those selected here, e.g. ‘aristocracy’. In making the searches ‘British English’ was used which includes ‘books predominantly in the English language and published in the United Kingdom’. Spikes in graphs are more likely to appear in material before 1800 since less material was published at that time and are not generally indicative of a significant increase, as they might suggest. A smoothing of 2 was used here. The 0 per cent flatline reflects data when less than forty books were found. See http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/info. Jean-Baptiste Michel, Yuan Kui Shen, Aviva Presser Aiden, Adrian Veres, Matthew K. Gray, William Brockman, the Google Books Team, Joseph P. Pickett, Dale Hoiberg, Dan Clancy, Peter Norvig, Jon Orwant, Steven Pinker, Martin A. Nowak, and Erez Lieberman Aiden. ‘Quantitative analysis of culture using millions of digitized books’, Science (published online ahead of print 16 Dec. 2010).
130 Bookworm functions similarly to Ngram it but enables non-case sensitive searches and all searches for the graphs here were made non-case sensitive and in English with a smoothing of two years. Graphs created at http://bookworm.culturomics.org
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