| Benedict Richard O'Gorman Anderson - Political Science - 1991 - 244 pages
...Ibid., p. 321. 18. Ibid., p. 330. 19. Ibid., pp. 331-32. international [sic] enterprise. '2° In a word, the fall of Latin exemplified a larger process in...by old sacred languages were gradually fragmented, pluralized, and territorialized. THE DYNASTIC REALM These days it is perhaps difficult to put oneself... | |
| Peter van der Veer - History - 1994 - 268 pages
...from an interpretation of European history into the elusive category of world history: "In a word, the fall of Latin exemplified a larger process in which the sacred communities integrated by sacred languages were gradually fragmented, pluralized, and territorialized."18 Anderson goes on to... | |
| Ronald Deibert - History - 2000 - 348 pages
...communication, among many European scholars, for example. See pp. 322-323. In Benedict Anderson's words, "... the fall of Latin exemplified a larger process in...by old sacred languages were gradually fragmented, pluralized, and territorialized." Anderson, Imagined Communities, p. 19. 77. Ibid., p. 46. 78. See... | |
| Sanjay Srivastava - Education - 1998 - 278 pages
...demotion of the sacred language [Latin] itself tAnderson l986: 241. such that by the eighteenth century 'the fall of Latin exemplified a larger process in...languages were gradually fragmented, pluralised, and territorial ised' tibid,: 25(. Now, at the same time. and in connected ways, that the community of... | |
| Thomas Scanlan - Drama - 1999 - 268 pages
...world," and second the decline of Latin as the sacred language. For Anderson, this latter phenomenon, "exemplified a larger process in which the sacred...by old sacred languages were gradually fragmented, pluralized, and territorialized."62 Anderson is interested in examining a process in which cultural... | |
| Michael McKeon - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2000 - 972 pages
...languages, publishing was ceasing to be an international [stc] enterprise."2" In a word, the fall ot Latin exemplified a larger process in which the sacred...by old sacred languages were gradually fragmented, pluralized, and territorialized. The Dynastic Realm These days it is perhaps difficult to put oneself... | |
| Gitte Stald, Thomas Tufte - Art - 2002 - 286 pages
...language, Latin, through the means of the printing press. The fall of Latin, according to Anderson, exemplified a larger process in which the sacred communities...by old sacred languages were gradually fragmented, pluralized and territorialized (Anderson, 1992 p. 19). Hence, print capitalism created unified fields... | |
| Richard J. Utz, Jesse G. Swan - Literary Criticism - 2005 - 262 pages
...permits a sense of community, Anderson cites the breakdown of Latin as a seminal moment: "In a word, the fall of Latin exemplified a larger process in...by old sacred languages were gradually fragmented, pluralized and territorialized" (19). In this sense, Alfonso X's deliberate use of Spanish in many... | |
| Camille Kaminski Lewis - English language - 2007 - 200 pages
...Before the modern notion of nation, language was considered untouchable and sacred. Anderson argues that "the fall of Latin exemplified a larger process in...by old sacred languages were gradually fragmented, pluralized, and territorialized" (19). That is, before nations were imagined, Latin, as one example,... | |
| Şehnaz Tahir Gürçağlar - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2008 - 333 pages
...the focus of the "imagined community" towards a linguistic one from a religious basis. This led to "a larger process in which the sacred communities...by old sacred languages were gradually fragmented, pluralized and territorialized" (Anderson 1991: 19). People speaking shared languages that were asserted... | |
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