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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton July 27, 2005

Code-switching and textual strategies in Nino Ricci's trilogy

  • Silvia Camarca
From the journal Semiotica

Abstract

The use of more than one language in a literary text is called literary multilingualism. Ricci's trilogy presents this linguistic phenomenon as the author uses more than one linguistic code in the same text: English, Italian, and dialect. This work describes how code-switching becomes an important device of mimesis, representing not just a switching in language, but also a switch in culture, style, and in voice. This study demonstrates how Ricci exploited his linguistic richness on a literary level creating novels that present the Italian world in a realistic way, but at the same time making use of linguistic varieties as literary device.

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Published Online: 2005-07-27
Published in Print: 2005-04-20

© Walter de Gruyter

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